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Leyes y políticas nacionales sobre derechos de escolaridad o enseñanza gratuita – Brazil

Importa si el Estado facilita la enseñanza gratuitamente o si cobra derechos de enseñanza. Todos los Estados del mundo han firmado por lo menos un tratado internacional que les obliga a hacer que la enseñanza primaria sea gratuita y obligatoria y que la educación secundaria llegue a serlo progresivamente. Pero la educación no puede ser obligatoria si no es gratuita también y esta contradicción suele ser ignorada con demasiada frecuencia. Además, ¿qué significa realmente la enseñanza gratuita en un mundo lleno de costos evidentes y ocultos para los estudiantes, los padres y las comunidades locales? Según los resultados de una encuesta realizada por Katarina Tomasevski en 2006, la enseñanza no era realmente gratuita en la gran mayoría de los países del mundo. La información que figura a continuación sobre su país, fue sacada de este importantísimo estudio.

 

Las leyes y políticas nacionales son las aplicaciones de la constitución, aunque pueden ser más avanzadas, porque son examinadas y elaboradas de nuevo con más frecuencia. Las leyes son hechas por el gobierno, los parlamentarios y los burócratas, a menudo en consulta con la sociedad civil. No obstante, esto también las expone a la vulnerabilidad y el retroceso, pues pueden convertirse en instrumentos de la política y las prioridades a corto plazo. Las leyes y las políticas son accesibles al cambio y la influencia por medio del proceso democrático y las campañas de la sociedad civil. Y sus violaciones deben, si es posible, ser impugnadas en los tribunales o mediante la revisión judicial.

 

 

 

 

El Estado es el actor principal en cualquier reclamo del derecho a la educación, es el principal detentor de obligaciones, el principal ejecutor, es el garante, la firma respecto a las normas internacionales que lo obligan a respetar, proteger y realizar el derecho a la educación. El Estado debe, por lo tanto, ser juzgado o cuestionado sobre la base de su texto principal sobre el derecho a la educación, sea éste la constitución, las leyes o las políticas.

It was no coincidence that Brazil, alongside Argentina, announced in January 2006 that it paid its debts to the IMF so as to re-gain freedom for a futurebuilt on strong investment in education. The (previous) government noted in 2001 that it needed to overcome a number of major barriers comprising adjustment programmes and a series of international financial crises before it could implement wide-ranging social policies. 

Education is defined as a collective good as well as an individual public right in Brazil. This associates individual entitlements with corresponding public responsibilities. The principal bearers of this responsibility are the local authorities and the federal states. The 1988 Constitution specified obligatory allocations of 18% for the federal budget, and 25% for state and municipal budgets: 

With Brazils 1988 Constitution, the percentage of government funding to be assigned to [education] increased to 18 per cent at the federal level and 25 per cent at the state and municipal level. More recently, the Teaching Development and Enhancement Maintenance Fund (FUNDEF) was introduced, with the immediate objective of ensuring a minimum expenditure per student and a special minimum wage for teachers. The Fund reaffirmed the need for the states, federal district and municipal districts to comply with the provisions of Brazils 1988 Constitution, which stipulates that 25 per cent of the tax revenues and other transferred income should be allocated to the maintenance and development of the education system and that states must allocate 60 per cent of this funding to basic education as from 1998, ensuring that 15 per cent of tax revenues are also allocated to this area.

 This new legal provision stated that the responsibility for providing the necessary funding falls within the competence of the states, the federal district and the municipal districts. However, owing to their widely varying social and economic levels, which results in low annual outlays per student, particularly in north-east and north Brazil, the Federal Government, under Decree 14/96, assumes responsibility for supplementing the amounts allocated to FUNDEF whenever the allocation per student falls below a nationally defined minimum level.

 This scheme, which was in 2004 extended to all basic education, necessitates monitoring so as to determine whether funds are earmarked for education as they should be, and whether the earmarked funds are deployed as they should be. Because financial responsibilities for education are allocated to different tiers of government, from central to local, monitoring reveals a variety of best and worst practices in this huge and diverse country. Transparency Brazil has shown that in 63% of municipalities there were cases of embezzlement and in 60% the funds earmarked for education were used for other purposes. The contribution of the civil society has also proved crucial in exposing and opposing budgetary allocations inconsistent with constitutional mandates. The law gives standing to a broad range of actors, from individual citizens to trade unions, to vindicate the right to education. This entitlement encompasses primary education for all, while free secondary education is to be realized progressively. 

In an illustrative case, initiated by the federal ministry (Ministerio Público) against municipal authorities of Novo Cruzeiro, the court has ordered the municipal authorities to ensure free transportation to children within 30 days or pay fines. The children had not been able to go to school three years. The federal ministry, after many attempts to enforce the childrens right to education, resorted to court so as to ensure that obligations mandated by the Constitution were implemented. The case revolved around repairing roads and organizing transport for school children but the issue was much broader: 

Without education, the fundamental objectives of the Republic, namely the construction of a free, fair and understanding society, the guarantee of national development, the eradication of poverty and marginalization, and the reduction of social inequalities, will not be achieved. 

The definition of free education is indeed broad, as described in the introduction to this section. Governmental policy includes the elimination of charges as well as supplementary entitlements. These span teaching and learning materials, school transport, school-based food or health services where these are indispensable to enable children to complete the schooling they are entitled to. Bolsa escola has been extended to some 10 million children to enable the children to regularly attend school. Its elimination of opportunity costs enabled 97% of children aged 7 to 14 to enrol in school, a higher percentage that 93% in the United States of America […]