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Why is foreign trade so important to Brazil?  

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Brazilian government has recognized that the increasing number of street children is a problem. In the 1970s and 1980s grassroots activism for children in Brazil grew into a social movement embedded in the fight against military dictatorship(Dewes, Klees 1995). This brought attention to the problem and led to changes in the roles of public and private ideologies of street children. An example of this occured in November 1989 when Article 227 of the Brazilian Constitution was approved. For the first time this granted rights to the street children: "It is the duty of the family, the society, and the state to guarantee to the child and adolescent, with absolute priority, the right to life, health, nutrition, education, leisure, professional training, culture, dignity, respect, liberty and community and family living, as well as protecting them from discrimination, exploitation, cruelty, and oppression." (Dewees, Klees 1995) Why is foreign trade so important...

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