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Hunger in Brazil: Notes on the narratives in the Folha de São Paulo newspaper during the 2020 pandemic period

A fome no Brasil: notas sobre as narrativas no jornal Folha de São Paulo no período pandêmico de 2020

ABSTRACT

Objective

This survey aims atreviewing the journalistic narratives of the newspaper Folha de São Paulo (digital edition) about hunger in Brazil during the 2020 pandemic period. It is known that journalism plays an important role in keeping the public informed and in helping to contribute to the shaping of society's opinion. Despite hunger being a structural phenomenon in this country, little is published in the mainstream media discussing the magnitude of the problem and the articulation of measures taken in the three government spheres (federal, state and municipal), to ensure access to food to the most vulnerable populations.

Method

News excerpts addressing hunger as the main topic were selected from Folha de São Paulo daily newspaper and were highlighted based on reading keys (n=11, published between March and December 2020).

Results

In all the selected articles, the newspaper addressed the cause of hunger from the perspective of the pandemic (passing event and manifestation). Issues linked to the economic and social crisis experienced in the country were not emphasized. This form of covering hunger in news articles can enhance the idea that the poor are the result of the currently spreading fatality.

Conclusion

Finally, from these first results we could infer that the newspaper, when addressing hunger in Brazil in the first months of the COVID-19 pandemic, sought to construct a biased reality that hunger was derived from the health crisis, at the same time that it presents the hungry people narratives as a discursive strategy to sensitize the reader to Folha de São Paulo intentions.

Keywords:
Communications media; Feeding in the urban context; Food deprivation; Food insecurity; Human right to adequate food; Journalism

RESUMO

Objetivo

A nota tem como objetivo examinar as narrativas jornalísticas do jornal Folha de São Paulo (digital) sobre a fome no Brasil, no período pandêmico de 2020, uma vez que se compreende que as narrativas jornalísticas têm um papel importante na formação de opinião da sociedade. Apesar da fome ser um fenômeno estrutural no país, pouco se vê nos grandes meios de comunicação o debate sobre a magnitude dos problemas e articulação de medidas governamentais nas três esferas de gestão (federal, estadual e municipal), que possam assegurar o acesso à alimentação adequada e saudável dos mais vulneráveis.

Método

Foram selecionadas notícias na Folha de São Paulo que tratavam da fome como pauta principal, sendo analisadas com base em chaves de leitura (n=11, divulgadas entre março e dezembro de 2020).

Resultados

Em todas as matérias selecionadas o jornal abordou a causa da fome a partir da perspectiva da pandemia (acontecimento e manifestação passageira). As questões vinculadas à crise econômica e social vivenciada no país não foram enfatizadas. A forma de acionar os famintos nas matérias pode reforçar a ideia de que os pobres são fruto da fatalidade que se propaga.

Conclusão

Por fim, os resultados iniciais permitem inferir que o jornal ao editar a fome no Brasil, no primeiro ano da pandemia de COVID-19, procurou construir uma realidade enviesada de que a fome é derivada de uma crise sanitária ao mesmo tempo que apresenta as narrativas dos famintos como estratégia discursiva para sensibilizar o leitor em relação às suas intenções.

Palavras-chave:
Meios de comunicação; Alimentação no contexto urbano; Privação de alimentos; Insegurança alimentar; Direito humano à alimentação adequada; Jornalismo

INTRODUCTION

Hunger is a permanent feature in peripheral countries like Brazil and, in different proportions, in central countries. In this scientific note, the concept of hunger is understood as a condition derived from factors that include political choices and territorial conflicts, climate variability and economic slowdowns, processes intrinsic to the historical development of capitalism [11. Freitas MCR, Pena PGL. Fome e Pandemia de Covid-19 no Brasil. Tessituras. 2020;8(1):34-40. https://doi.org/10.15210/tes.v8iSuplemento.18903
https://doi.org/10.15210/tes.v8iSuplemen...
,22. Ribeiro Junior JRS. A fome como processo e a reprodução social capitalista. BPG. 2021;1(105):15-39. ].

However, even though there are limitations in terms of precision of any indirect indicator, the Escala Brasileira de Insegurança Alimentar (Brazilian Food Insecurity Scale) is used to produce data on the degree of family food security in the household [33. Segall-Corrêa AM, Marin-Leon L. A segurança alimentar no Brasil: proposição e usos da escala brasileira de medida da insegurança alimentar (EBIA) de 2003 a 2009. Segur Aliment Nutr. 2015:16(2):1-19. https://doi.org.10.20396/san.v16i2.8634782
https://doi.org.10.20396/san.v16i2.86347...
] and hunger represents the maximum expression of severe food insecurity; in this framework a significant reduction of available food quantity, including among children, occurs and/or disruption in eating patterns when someone in the household goes the entire day without eating due to lack of money to buy food [44. Rede PENSSAN. I Inquérito Nacional sobre Insegurança Alimentar no Contexto da Pandemia da Covid-19 no Brasil [Internet]. São Paulo: Rede PENSSAN e Fundação Freidrich Ebert; 2021. [cited 2022 Sep 15]. Available from: https://olheparaafome.com.br/pesquisa2020/#manifestu
https://olheparaafome.com.br/pesquisa202...
].

The hunger scenario in Brazil derives from the neoliberal economic model associated with social inequality causing poverty and unemployment. However, in the 2000s, the positive socioeconomic situation led to a reduction in unemployment [55. Brambilla MAC, Marina S. Pobreza multidimensional no Brasil, 1991, 2000 e 2010: uma abordagem espacial para os municípios brasileiros. Nova Econ. 2021;31(3):869-98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/0103-6351/6196
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/0103-6351/6196...
] and poverty [66. Rede PENSSAN. II Inquérito Nacional sobre Segurança Alimentar no Contexto da Pandemia da COVID-19 no Brasil. II VIGISAN [Internet]. São Paulo: Rede PENSSAN e Fundação Freidrich Ebert ; 2022 [cited 2022 Sep 15]. Available from: https://olheparaafome.com.br/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/Relatorio-II--VIGISAN-2022.pdf
https://olheparaafome.com.br/wp-content/...
] and an improvement in the population's living conditions, culminating, in 2014, with the country's removal from the United Nations’ Hunger Map [77. Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, International Fund for Agricultural Development, World Food Programme. The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2014. Strengthening the enabling environment for food security and nutrition [Internet]. Rome: FAO; 2014 [cited 2023 May 16]. Available from: https://www.fao.org/3/i4030e/i4030e.pdf
https://www.fao.org/3/i4030e/i4030e.pdf...
].

Nevertheless, in recent years, a reversal condition developed with a growth of Brazilians going hungry [44. Rede PENSSAN. I Inquérito Nacional sobre Insegurança Alimentar no Contexto da Pandemia da Covid-19 no Brasil [Internet]. São Paulo: Rede PENSSAN e Fundação Freidrich Ebert; 2021. [cited 2022 Sep 15]. Available from: https://olheparaafome.com.br/pesquisa2020/#manifestu
https://olheparaafome.com.br/pesquisa202...
,66. Rede PENSSAN. II Inquérito Nacional sobre Segurança Alimentar no Contexto da Pandemia da COVID-19 no Brasil. II VIGISAN [Internet]. São Paulo: Rede PENSSAN e Fundação Freidrich Ebert ; 2022 [cited 2022 Sep 15]. Available from: https://olheparaafome.com.br/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/Relatorio-II--VIGISAN-2022.pdf
https://olheparaafome.com.br/wp-content/...
]. From 2015 onwards, there was an increase in unemployment among the Brazilian population aged 14 or over, together with an increase in the number of families in extreme poverty (monthly income of up to R$ 89,00 per person) [88. Neves JA, Machado ML, Oliveira LDA, Moreno YMF, Medeiros MAT, Vasconcelos FAG. Unemployment, poverty, and hunger in Brazil in Covid-19 pandemic times. Rev Nutr. 2021;34:e200170. https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-9865202134e200170
https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-9865202134e...
]. In 2020, 19.1 million people were hungry in Brazil and 116.8 million Brazilians did not have full and permanent access to food [44. Rede PENSSAN. I Inquérito Nacional sobre Insegurança Alimentar no Contexto da Pandemia da Covid-19 no Brasil [Internet]. São Paulo: Rede PENSSAN e Fundação Freidrich Ebert; 2021. [cited 2022 Sep 15]. Available from: https://olheparaafome.com.br/pesquisa2020/#manifestu
https://olheparaafome.com.br/pesquisa202...
]. In 2022, the number of starving people increased dramatically to 33.1 million, that is, there were millions of people who went hungry every day [66. Rede PENSSAN. II Inquérito Nacional sobre Segurança Alimentar no Contexto da Pandemia da COVID-19 no Brasil. II VIGISAN [Internet]. São Paulo: Rede PENSSAN e Fundação Freidrich Ebert ; 2022 [cited 2022 Sep 15]. Available from: https://olheparaafome.com.br/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/Relatorio-II--VIGISAN-2022.pdf
https://olheparaafome.com.br/wp-content/...
].

The pandemic scenario, with social isolation measures, worsened this situation, enhancing the trend of global economic recession; in addition, this situation occurred in parallel with the dismantling of public policies, such as food and nutritional security programs, followed by the expansion of fiscal austerity measures that have been dragging on since the 2015 political-economic crises [99. Oliveira TC, Abranches MV, Lana RM. (In)Segurança alimentar no contexto da pandemia por SARS-CoV-2. Cad Saude Publica. 2020;36(4):e0055220. https://doi.org/10.1590/0102-311X00055220
https://doi.org/10.1590/0102-311X0005522...
,88. Neves JA, Machado ML, Oliveira LDA, Moreno YMF, Medeiros MAT, Vasconcelos FAG. Unemployment, poverty, and hunger in Brazil in Covid-19 pandemic times. Rev Nutr. 2021;34:e200170. https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-9865202134e200170
https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-9865202134e...
]. However we can observe in some mainstream media outlets that the narratives on hunger are associated predominantly to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Bourdieu [1010. Bourdieu P. Sobre a televisão. Rio de Janeiro: Jorge Zahar Editor Ltda; 1997.] argues that journalism contributes to the construction of social reality and plays an important role in shaping society's opinion. Reality, as well as knowledge and prescriptions about hunger are also edited [1111. Baccega MA. Do mundo editado à construção do mundo. Comun Educ. [Internet]. 1994 [cited 2023 June 1];(1):7-14. Available from: https://www.revistas.usp.br/comueduc/article/view/36194
https://www.revistas.usp.br/comueduc/art...
]. And according to Patez et al. (p. 34, our translation), “[...] discourses can socially interfere in a problem, for example, social discrimination and inequality that may be related to power relations” [1212. Patez D, Silva SO, Kallarrari C. A (im)polidez nos discursos presentes em comentários da notícia “fome, mais uma vergonha nacional” da Folha de S. Paulo. Missangas. 2022;3(5):e15066. Disponível https://doi.org/10.53500/missangas.v3i5.15066
https://doi.org/10.53500/missangas.v3i5....
]. Another fundamental issue is the understanding that speeches can be based on “[...] ideological guidelines and be used to sustain and reproduce an existing social reality” (p. 34, our translation).

The media is understood in this text as a field of production and consumption of symbolic goods, that is, goods that imply an act of decipherment, of mental appropriation [1313. Catani AF, Nogueira MA, Hey AP, Medeiros CC editors. Vocabulário Bourdieu. Belo Horizonte: Editora Autêntica; 2017.]. The media discourse is constructed from “communicative strategies that are understood as discourse organizing attitudes which resort to linguistic forms to pursue the media objectives” (p. 2, our translation) [1414. Motta LG. Análise pragmática da narrativa jornalística. In: Lago C, Benetti M, editors. Metodologia de Pesquisa em Jornalismo. 2nd ed. Petrópolis: Vozes; 2008.].

In this scenario, we sought to examine the journalistic narratives printed in the newspaper Folha de São Paulo (digital edition) about the causalities of hunger in Brazil in the 2020 pandemic period. To be able to know and understand the narratives constructed or (re)constructed around the hunger through the media can help understanding how the media mobilizes society with regard to this problem.

METHODS

Our survey is part of a qualitative approach and its empirical focus is based on the articles published on the topic in the newspaper Folha de São Paulo (digital edition); this news paperis considered one of the main Brazilian newspapers, distributed in almost all regions of the country and top-rated in 25 of the 27 States in the country considering the monthly averages in 2020 [1515. ivcbrasil.org.br[Internet]. São Paulo: ICV Brasil; c2017 [cited Mar 2022]. Available from: https://ivcbrasil.org.br/#/servicos
https://ivcbrasil.org.br/#/servicos...
].

The news survey was carried out by three surveyors trained for this purpose. The term “hunger” was used in the search engine of the digital version of the newspaper, selecting articles published between March and December 2020. The headlines were read in full to assess eligibility. The following inclusion criteria were adopted: journalistic genres with informative content and direct thematic reference, that is, which had the theme of hunger as the main topic in the sections “Market”, “Authors”, “Everyday Life”, “Health” and “Editorial.” These sections were previously selected because they usually publish informative content.

Among the news selected, one belonging to the interview genre was included for analysis, due to its informative nature. For Morin (p. 115, our translation), "An interview is a personal communication with an information objective in mind" [1616. Morin E. A entrevista nas Ciências Sociais, na rádio e na televisão. In: Moles AA, Glucksmann A, Friedmann G, Morin E, editors. Linguagem da cultura de massa. Petrópolis: Vozes ; 1973. ] and, Abreu [1717. Abreu MS. Entrevista jornalística como técnica e como gênero. In: Silva G, Vogel D, Silva T, editors. Apuração, redação e edição jornalística. Florianópolis: Editora da UFSC; 2022.] points out that the interview is nested in the informative journalistic genre.

The data collected were entered in a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet and the articles were reviewed based on their context, speakers and interlocutors and guided by the reading key on causality from the perspective of Bonfim [1818. Bonfim JBB. As políticas públicas sobre a fome no Brasil. Brasília: Senado Federal, Consultoria Legislativa; 2004.]; in other words if the newspaper narrated the famine as just an event, a manifestation without pointing out or discussing the causes. The author highlights that one ought to be attentive to the attribution [by newspapers] of temporary causes or as something inherent to reality.

This study was carried out in accordance with Resolution nº. 466/2012 of the National Health Council of Brazil and was approved by the Research Ethics Committee of the Hospital Universitário Pedro Ernesto under Opinion nº. 5,175,238 and CAAE: 52763221.6.0000.5259.

RESULTS

The research analysis corpus was delimited into 11 subjects in the “health” (4) and “everyday life” (7) sections (Chart 1). It was observed that during the period from May to December, with the exception of July, there was no news about hunger as a central topic.

Chart 1 -
News from the (digital) newspaper Folha de São Paulo that are part of the analysis corpus (2020).

Seven journalists were identified in the newsroom who did not seem to vary the narratives in the different reports. Without ignoring individual profiles, the analytical approach adopted focused on the voices that represent Folha de São Paulo. By directing the analysis to the vehicle as a whole, space is opened to understand how the newspaper's collective identity is manifested through these contributions, offering a perspective that goes beyond the individual characteristics of the authors.

This methodological choice allows an understanding of the role played by the publication and the way in which its diverse voices collaborate to shape the journalistic narrative about hunger in this press vehicle.

In all the selected articles, the newspaper addressed the cause of hunger from the perspective of the pandemic (passing event and manifestation). In one of them (FS11), hunger, when linked to the health crisis, was called an epidemic, a term coined by Josué de Castro in his book Geography of Hunger, that is, a conjunctural hunger characterized by nutritional manifestations that affect temporarily a large mass of people. However, a reinterpretation of this author is made by Vasconcelos [1919. Vasconcelos FAG. Josué de Castro e a Geografia da Fome no Brasil. Cad Saude Publica . 2008;24(11):2710-7. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0102-311X2008001100027
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0102-311X200800...
] who pointed out the importance of superimposing the complexity of the problem in the face of the vicissitudes of the contemporary scenario within the framework of ensuring the human right to food and ecological sustainability.

Issues linked to the economic and social crisis experienced in the country were not emphasized. In the articles, a narrative is constructed that social isolation as a restrictive measure to prevent spreading of the new coronavirus is the main cause of hunger that affects, in particular, the population living in risk areas and subnormal clusters, that is, in favelas(shantytowns) and similar places. The health crisis is linked to unemployment growth and a decrease in income, with a consequent increase in food and nutritional insecurity.

Statements like “Hebert [...] spent the last few months selling water cups at the traffic lights on Avenida Giovanni Gronchi, in Morumbi, south of São Paulo. With no displacements in the city, he has no one to sell to” (FS1), “In Nazzali, Folha found people who had already been laid off and consequently lost, from one moment to the next, a large part of the income they usedto bring home, many times on a weekly or daily basis” (FS2) and “Quarantine in São Paulo reduces the diet of children in the suburbs to rice” (FS4) are examples of how Folha de São Paulo’s journalists reported on hunger during this period of the COVID-19 pandemic in Brazil, associating it to unemployment and loss of financial resources.

It is worth noting that despite the recognized worsening of the health of the socioeconomic vulnerable population groups resulting from the health crisis, the Brazilian government resisted adhering to stricter protection strategies against the pandemic [2020. Oliveira TC, Abranches MV, Lana RM. Food (in)security in Brazil in the context of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. Cad Saude Publica . 2020;36(4):e00055220. https://doi.org/10.1590/0102-311x00055220
https://doi.org/10.1590/0102-311x0005522...
]. In May 2020, the National Health Council recommended the implementation of more restrictive physical distancing measures in those municipalities with an accelerated occurrence of new cases of COVID-19 and with service occupancy rates reaching critical levels. And, only in January 2021 did the vaccination campaign against COVID-19 begin and by April 19, 2021, only 12.59% of the population had taken one dose of vaccine and 4.78%, two doses. This, among other factors, contributed to the failure of an early control the pandemic in the country [ 2121. Abreu AM, Palazzo CC, Barboza BP, Wazlawik E, Diez-Garcia RW, Vasconcelos FAG. Conjunctural hunger and structural obesity in the global scenario: reflections on what Covid-19 masks reveal. Rev Nutr . 2021;34:e200221. https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-9865202134e200221
https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-9865202134e...
].

Linking unemployment and lack of income primarily to the pandemic disguises jobs precariousness and unemployment as evident expressions of social issues in contemporary times and that were present in the country before the pandemic [2222. Santos AM. Questão social, desemprego, precarização e produção da pobreza: os reflexos para a produção da economia solidária no Brasil. Praxis. 2016;20:29-56. ]. This suggests that the newspaper publishes a reality arguing that people's difficulty in reacting to the crisis is due to their economic incapacity this being the main cause of the lack of access to food. This significance is enhanced by the lack of information in the news about the dismantling of food insecurity social policies, such as the extinction of the National Council for Food and Nutritional Security [2121. Abreu AM, Palazzo CC, Barboza BP, Wazlawik E, Diez-Garcia RW, Vasconcelos FAG. Conjunctural hunger and structural obesity in the global scenario: reflections on what Covid-19 masks reveal. Rev Nutr . 2021;34:e200221. https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-9865202134e200221
https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-9865202134e...
] among others, also due to the continuous devaluation of the local currency (Real), compensating for the fall in international prices as one of the causes of persistent food inflation in 2020 [2323. Baccarin JG, Oliveira J. A Inflação de alimentos no Brasil em período da pandemia da Covid 19, continuidade e mudanças. Segur Aliment Nutr . 2021;28():e021002. ].

With regard to food and nutrition policies, the unavailability of free school meals due to school shut down was reported: “With no fixed income, Rosangela da Silva, 36, found herself with five more mouths, who previously ate their meals at school [...] "Sometimes we find stale bread at the bakery," she says (FS4). But in these statements, as in others found in the articles, the statements of individuals in vulnerable situations are prioritized, as also observed by Rigaud et al. [2424. Rigaud JPO, Verthein Úrsula P, Amparo-Santos L. Fome em tempos de pandemia de COVID-19: uma análise crítica aos sentidos (re)produzidos pela mídia. Segur Aliment Nutr . [Internet]. 2021 [citle 2023 Junr 20];28(00):e021009. Available from: https://periodicos.sbu.unicamp.br/ojs/index.php/san/article/view/8662059
https://periodicos.sbu.unicamp.br/ojs/in...
]. When vulnerable people who suffer from hunger are mentioned, it is in order to exemplify or testify to situations of poverty and precariousness in the face of the violence that plagues them. In the reports, there was no debate, for example, about how much food insecurity puts the nutritional status and health of these people at risk, which in turn makes people vulnerable to worse prognoses in terms of exposure, risk and severity of diseases [2121. Abreu AM, Palazzo CC, Barboza BP, Wazlawik E, Diez-Garcia RW, Vasconcelos FAG. Conjunctural hunger and structural obesity in the global scenario: reflections on what Covid-19 masks reveal. Rev Nutr . 2021;34:e200221. https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-9865202134e200221
https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-9865202134e...
]

This form of covering hunger in news articles can arouse in the readers more feelings of pity than indignation and enhance the idea that the poor are the result of the currently spreading fatality [2525. Galeano E. A caminho de uma sociedade da incomunicação? In: Moraes D. Sociedade Midiatizada. Rio de Janeiro: Mauad; 2006. p. 149-154.]. Although the narratives expose a condition of structural violence, which is “a process that works slowly like misery in general, hunger in particular, and that erodes and ultimately kills human beings” (p. 145, our translation) [2626. Galtung J. Twenty-five years of peace research: Ten challenges and some responses. J Peace Res. 1985;22(2):141-158.], they construct a way of understanding the reality claiming that the cause of hunger was defined more by the socioeconomic consequences resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on daily life than by structural causes. Folha de São Paulo, by portraying the daily suffering of people during the pandemic with respect to hunger, demonstrates interest in the dimension of poverty and becomes credible to the public.

This way of understanding reality that gives meaning to the world is called symbolic power by Bourdieu [2727. Bourdieu P. O poder simbólico. Rio de Janeiro: Bertrand Brasil; 1989.] and is present in the society structure. It is an “invisible power which can only be exercised with the complicity of those who do not want to know that they are subject to it or even that they exercise it” (p. 7, our translation) [2727. Bourdieu P. O poder simbólico. Rio de Janeiro: Bertrand Brasil; 1989.], producing integration and consensus, thus reproducing the social order. However, as subjects are not passive in the construction of the world, it is important to develop the ability to reflect on the communication process and the construction of reality [1111. Baccega MA. Do mundo editado à construção do mundo. Comun Educ. [Internet]. 1994 [cited 2023 June 1];(1):7-14. Available from: https://www.revistas.usp.br/comueduc/article/view/36194
https://www.revistas.usp.br/comueduc/art...
].

FINAL CONSIDERATIONS

These initial results allow us to infer that the newspaper, when covering hunger in Brazil, in the first months of the COVID-19 pandemic, constructed a biased reality claiming that hunger is derived from a health crisis, at the same time that it presents the narratives of the hungry as discursive strategy to sensitize the reader to the newspaper’s objectives. This way of narrating hunger contributes to turning the mediocre experience of these hungry bodies a natural occurrence and enhances the idea that there is no need to do anything about it, because naturally with the end of the COVID-19 pandemic comes the end of hunger.

It is recognized that the COVID-19 pandemic and the worsening of hunger in Brazil together formed a major humanitarian tragedy. However, it is believed that it is only viable to think about the actual management of this condition by dissociating hunger from an event or manifestation resulting from a social calamity, understanding it in its complexity as an expression of the violation of the Direito Humano à Alimentação Adequada (Human Right to Adequate Food).

REFERENCES

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    » https://doi.org/10.15210/tes.v8iSuplemento.18903
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    » https://www.fao.org/3/i4030e/i4030e.pdf
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    » https://periodicos.sbu.unicamp.br/ojs/index.php/san/article/view/8662059
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  • 1
    Article elaborated from dissertation by RL NASCIMENTO, entitled “Um olhar sobre a fome no Brasil durante a pandemia de COVID-19: análise de notícias da Folha de São Paulo”. Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro; 2023.
  • Support:

    Fundação Carlos Chagas de Apoio à Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (FAPERJ) (Process nº E-26/211.864/2021) and Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (Capes) (Code 88887.635930/2021-00)

Edited by

Editor:

Francisco de Assis Guedes de Vasconcelos

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    03 May 2024
  • Date of issue
    2024

History

  • Received
    27 June 2023
  • Reviewed
    22 Nov 2023
  • Accepted
    01 Feb 2024
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