brazilianisation
Appearance
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]brazilianisation (countable and uncountable, plural brazilianisations)
- Alternative form of Brazilianization
- 1986, Socialist Affairs - Issue 2, page 48:
- Invoking the examples of Japan and the United States, he weighs the dangers of economic dualism and the creeping 'brazilianisation' of job markets.
- 2001, Post proceedings of the World Conference on Cultural Design/Digital Condition Design, →ISBN:
- In his eagerness to show how erroneous the Brazilian modernists were, Holston fails to discuss the desire for modernisation among the Brazilian people. Even if the people demand "brazilianisation", such a process might include elements of modernisation.
- 2005 -, SEER South-east Europe Review for Labour and Social Affairs:
- Due to the early 1990s crisis, but also to the transition from a work society to a knowledge society, the increasing unemployment rate and the growing incidence of part-time, flexible and 'precarious' employment in westem countries have been documented and described as a 'brazilianisation of the west' (Beck, 2000).
- 2017, Laura Spinney, Pale Rider: The Spanish Flu of 1918 and How it Changed the World:
- They talked about brazilianisation by infection, of Brazil as an immense hospital, and these ideas percolated into literature, reinforced, perhaps, by the memory of those flu-themed parades in the 1919 Rio Carnival, when groups calling themselves 'Midnight Tea' and 'Holy House' sang bawdy songs about a 'Spanish lady'.