É permitido proibir : o Dops e a repressão aos comunistas no norte do Paraná (1945 -1953)

This work investigates the anti-communism's impact over the institutional dynamics of the Paraná's Political Police - Dops/PR, as well as over the police's imaginary towards the communists in the period between the years 1945 to 1953. During these years, the state of Paraná was brande...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Author: Ipólito, Verônica Karina
Format: master thesis
Status:Published version
Publication Date:2009
Country:Brasil
Institution:Universidade Estadual de Maringá (UEM)
Repository:Repositório Institucional da Universidade Estadual de Maringá (RI-UEM)
Language:Portuguese
OAI Identifier:oai:localhost:1/2960
Online Access:http://repositorio.uem.br:8080/jspui/handle/1/2960
Access Level:Open access
Keyword:Partido Comunista Brasileiro
Anticomunismo
Repressão
Polícia Política
Polícia política paranaense
Dops/PR
Paraná
(Estado)
Brasil.
Brazilian Communist Party
Anti-communism
Crackdown
Parana s Political Police
State
Brazil.
Ciências Humanas
História
Description
Summary:This work investigates the anti-communism's impact over the institutional dynamics of the Paraná's Political Police - Dops/PR, as well as over the police's imaginary towards the communists in the period between the years 1945 to 1953. During these years, the state of Paraná was branded by the effervescent organization of the rural workers, mainly synthesized by the fighting for land, as it was the case of the "Revolt of Porecatu" (1948-1951), and by a daily political struggle in the cities, be it by political debates by the end of the Second War, the process of legalization of the Brazilian Communist Party and its subsequent proscription or in constant urban social movements. They are discussed the political and institutional speeches that acted as explanatory factors in the fighting against communism, for instance, the influence of the U.S. political police on the Brazilian police's apparatus, the crackdown on the communist militants during the government of Eurico Gaspar Dutra and the promulgation of the National Security Act of 1953. It parts of the assumption that the democratization after the "getulista" period was branded by the resurgence of anti-communists policies that reach its peak with the proscription of the PCB in 1947. For the work's making, they were used journalistic sources, interviews, reports, documents' funds (Dops Fund and DPS Fund) and legislation of the period. The research's approach has highlighted the politics emphasizing its role in power relations, taking into account the ideologies, values, traditions and culture of the social actors involved in the movements. The work considers the anti-communism as a set of ideas that imposes the domination. Therefore, we believe that this is a contradictory period where there was freedom in theory but in practice the power of the State inhibited the rights of deciding and acting.