Sociology International Journal
Review Article
Open Access
School and work: elements to discuss youth in Brazil
Abstract
Volume 2 Issue 5 - 2018
Brazil is living a demographic bonus. Considering the relationship between school and
work, the biggest challenge posed by the demographic youth bonus consists in better
qualifying such a group of youth and articulating this qualification with employment
policies that can support development cycles in the next decades, in a country that walks
to a fast process of population ageing. Based on a synthetic dataset of national scope, this
paper presents a brief picture of the main education and work policies developed in Brazil
in the last fifteen years. Finally, it exposes the impasses around such policies, as well as the
main challenges that await us from now on.
Keywords: youth, school, work transition, public, policies, Brazil
Diógenes Pinheiro,1 Eliane Ribeiro,2 Mônica
Peregrino,3
1
Federal University of the State of Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
2
Postgraduate Program in Education, Federal University of the
State of Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
3
Postgraduate Program in Education, Federal University of the
State of Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
Correspondence: Diógenes Pinheiro, Federal University of the
State of Rio de Janeiro–UNIRIO, Pasteur Avenue, Brazil, Tel +55
21 2542 2928, Email
[email protected]
Received: May 29, 2018 | Published: September 10, 2018
Introduction
Being young in Brazil
Brazil has just over 200 million inhabitants, from which 50
million are juveniles aged 15-29.1 However, this “youth wave” begins
to decrease and, according to demographic projections, this share
of the population should decline very fast after 2025, amounting to
less than 35 million youth in 2050. From the point of view of the
relationship between school and work, the biggest challenge posed
by the demographic youth bonus consists in better grading such a
differentiated contingent of youth and articulating it with employment
policies that can support development cycles in the next decades, in a
country that walks to an accelerated process of populational ageing.
Among South American countries, Brazil has the biggest youth
population: fifty million! From these, around 25 million are employed
and 6 million are looking for a job. Nonetheless, exclusive dedication
to education is practised by just a quarter of the young population.
Based on a multidimensional approach that considers a more general
set of events in the life path of those individuals, such data confirms
that working always had a present and important dimension in the
lives of most of Brazilian youths.1, 2 From this perspective, working
has been exerted by the youth, specially by the poor, by means of
multiple combinations of study, family life and sociability. Differently
from many countries, this articulation and primarily the insertion in
the world of labour have been propitiating to a significant portion of
the Brazilian youth the enjoyment of being young. Brazil has, as its
most noticeable characteristics, continental dimensions and historical
social asymmetry. This leads to the fact that the juvenile condition in
the country is experienced in ways that are not only different, but also
1
In Brazil, according to the law that establish the Youth Statute–Law 12.852,
enacted on the fifth of august, 2013-youth, regarding the obligations of the
State, are the individuals aged between 15 and 29 years old. The Brazilian age
pyramid inform us that in 2017 the biggest populational concentration (over
50%) was in the age range between 0 to 34 years.2
2
In Brazil, as it is with other Latin American countries, the relation schoolwork has been strongly marked by an insertion in the labour activities before
the legal age. The recent achievements relating to the prohibition of child
labour and the promotion of guarantees to the children and youngsters are quite
recent, only gaining strength after the constitution of 1988.
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Sociol Int J. 2018;2(5):349‒353.
profoundly unequal. They are significantly disparate, when comparing
the trajectory of urban with rural youth, middle and upper class with
the popular groups, black people with white people, as well as young
females with young males.
Between 2005 and 2015, youth struggled to find support in the
federal government. During the first government of president Luiz
Inácio Lula da Silva (2003-2006), this closer approximation with
the organized youth collective’s claiming was conjoined for the
construction of policies and legal landmarks that sought to tackle
those inequalities in a new understanding of youth. In this new design,
the juvenile is a protagonist, that is, they have rights intrinsic to their
condition of being young and it is the duty of the State to give support
to their trajectories in the form of public policies without, however,
tutoring or considering them as mere recipients of such policies. Still
in 2005, a vigorous cycle of youth’s public policies started, mainly
by the creation of the National Youth Secretary (SNJ); the National
Counsel for the Youth (Conjuve), that reunited juvenile collectives
monitoring policies for the youth; and by many programs and policies
that sought to assert the participation of the youth as a structuring
axis for the planning and implementation of those actions. Due to the
greater national articulation, the force and the change of perspective
adopted, it is possible to characterize this period as an inclusive
cycle for the Brazilian youth. At this period, the search for autonomy
and emancipation was in the centre of youth’s demands. It had, as a
result, an effective expansion of the field of possibilities3 of young
Brazilians, especially in the educational sphere, more than in work,
as we will see ahead.
Considering the expansion of new social conditions that has marked
the life trajectory of Brazilian youth in the last fifteen years, as the
significant expansion of the access to education and the incorporation
of this age segment as a subject of rights in the legislation and in the
public policies, we should ask: who are the youths in Brazil today?
What means to be young in a globalized economy that points to a
restrictive and mutant world of work, pervaded by fast technological
changes and with a circulation of information humankind has never
seen before? How the various youth’s segments have been articulating
education and work? Which policies are required by the youths that
live in a reality full of uncertainties?
349
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©2018 Pinheiro et al.
School and work: elements to discuss youth in Brazil
Juvenile condition the relationship between education
and work
In this view, it is possible to assert that we learn little if we look at
the Brazilian youth as a group of people exposed to linear situations
or by the idea of actors performing trajectories as successive stages.
In view of the data presented, we observe the arising of new lines of
comprehension that might be able to capture movements instead of
static positions. The data reveals that it is important to think about
public policies for the youth considering that youth are strategic actors
for the development of a country and strong protagonists of rights
IBGE (Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics), especially
the PNAD (National Household Sample Survey) dates from 2015
shows that the trends described above are confirmed. The youngest
generations (15 to 17 years old) express the effects of our recent
educational advances. They work less and study more. As well, an
important legislation protecting poor families to support children and
youth growing has an important role in this matter. Between us, on
each age segment, study and work have different importance. From
18 years on, working becomes extremely relevant. But, unfortunately,
it does not mean the conclusion of the basic education.
Data concerning youngsters that neither study nor work is another
issue that deserve emphasis. An important part of it is constituted
by young women who conciliate work and / or study with family
responsibilities (baby care, young brothers, elderly etc.) As we see,
the indicator proves to be an important monitor of vulnerabilities.
In general, we observe that the youths show a non-linear trajectory
between school and work, returning and moving away from both
institutions in a recursive way. Among young women, the status
of responsible for the family and domestic tasks seems to be more
linear and established and cannot be postponed. This data allows us to
deduce that, for poor youngsters, education project can be postponed,
for both women and men. However, regarding women, work is
even more postponed. According to the National Youth Secretariat’s
research, Brazil Youth Agenda (SNJ, 2013), in educational process,
there are two critical situations for the poor youth.
The first situation is faced with ending each educational level,
making it easier to evade the school system. The second situation
occurs when school and work are aggregated, and, in this case, the
highest vulnerability happens when youth accumulate low education
and the labour insertion marked by employ turnover. Finally, we
cannot forget that in Brazil, these situations become more complex
when we analyse other markers beyond age group, such as inequalities
activated by the social class origin, gender, and race, situation of
domicile rural or urban, country’s region and work’s quality.
Contemporary debate about youth in Brazil
In the western urban societies, the youth is considered as a social
condition bearing some characteristics, but deeply marked by two
situations:
1. Emancipation of the primary socialization, based on family
immersion, prolonged contact with the primary schooling cycle,
with the residence area and the neighbourhood
2. Experimentation of other socializing institutions, such as
secondary school, the world of work, peer groups, in what
Berger e Luckman4 denominated secondary socialization as
“internalization of specialized institutional underworlds”.
350
In short, to be a youth implies searching for autonomy in a more
complex world, constituted by institutions that are markedly adult
centred, that is, constituted by the prism and values of those that are
not young anymore and see the youth from the standpoint of what they
do not have: schooling and experience. If we consider this condition
of emancipation of a close group for the insertion in another groupmore distant and impersonal, but also more ample and complex-we
will understand that youth characterizes itself as a kind of liminal
social condition, in the sense pointed by Turner. It is demarked by
transitional social processes that are fundamentals, as far as they
delimitate, in the present, possibilities and limits of social insertion
in the future.
Today in Brazil, a significant group of authors3,5‒8 consider the
relationship between school and work as a fundamental element to
understand important dimensions of our social inequality. Among the
debates around the juvenile condition, we will address the problem
of “transition to the adult life”, more specifically the relationship
between school and work in the scope of complex, difficult and
unequal processes of social insertion of the youth in Brazil. Studies
on the transition to the adult life seek to understand how, over
time, institutions such as school, work, families, political parties,
syndicates, religious congregation, and, more recently, peer groups
and cultural groups establish combinations in a way to offer support
to social insertion processes.
The Brazilian State only took the universalization of education
as horizon with the 1988 Federal Constitution, known as “Citizen
Constitution”, promulgated after 21 years of military dictatorship
that ended in 1985 with the transition to civil government. Brazil is,
therefore, a young democracy, in which the universalization of the
access to the Fundamental Education begun to be operationalized
from the mid-1990 and the universalization of the Basic Education
(Fundamental education and secondary education) happened only ten
years after that. Thus, the transition process between school and work,
important to the insertion in the adult life, was accomplished, for most
of the youth, having work, and not school, as the reference institution.
To the middle and upper classes, on the contrary, the school remained
as the central institution regarding the process of their youths’ social
insertion.
This unfair dynamic strongly feed the historical Brazilian social
inequality, since those who enter the world of work on the margins of
school education tend to keep, through life, the social and economic
conditions circumscribed to the kind of occupation characteristic of
their first work admission. In contrast, those who accomplish the
insertion in the world of work mediated by the school education,
not only tend to have a more secure and distinct first social insertion
but also conquer, thenceforth, a space to improve it throughout their
working careers.5 If the right to education started to be effective and
massively extended to the whole of Brazilian youth just 50 years
ago, with emphasis on the last 20 years, this means that the school
has entered in the process of our youths’ transition to adult life only
recently. Even so, it is necessary to highlight the fact that, according
to Cardoso, one regime of transition does not immediately substitute
the other, but there is, for sure, a “sliding”, a juxtaposition of regimes,
where the old model of intensive exploitation of youths’ work
recreates itself on a new basis.
Therefore, is it fair to ask if in a country traditionally unequal and
complex as Brazil it is possible that the State conducts the central
problem concerning the offer of supports for the combination between
school and work based on investment in specific sectorial policies? Or,
Citation: Pinheiro D, Ribeiro E, Peregrino M. School and work: elements to discuss youth in Brazil. Sociol Int J. 2018;2(5):349‒353.
DOI: 10.15406/sij.2018.02.00068
Copyright:
©2018 Pinheiro et al.
School and work: elements to discuss youth in Brazil
on the other hand, is it possible to develop, at the same time, sectoral
policies, to solve a problem that is in the intercession between them?
In this way, the process of transition school/work has been challenged
by many changes.
School expansion policies
The first set of recent expansion policies for education started to
be implemented in the second half of the 1990 and was focused on
the Fundamental Education. Its goal was the tackling of what was
diagnosed as the biggest problem at the time: the culture of repetition3
that reached significant amounts of children and teenagers, impeding
them of finishing the Fundamental Education. School flow correction
was the heart of an educational policy that lasted until the beginning
of 2000. Its objective was the reduction of retention indices through
the adequacy of the available infrastructure to provide services that
are more effective to students in general. The main point of this policy
was the acceleration of learning, operationalized through a program
that sought to create school vacancies through the stimulation of
learning processes without changing the available infrastructure.
The second set of expansion policies for education was
implemented during the two mandates of President Luiz Inácio Lula
da Silva (2003-2006 and 2007-2010). Here, the focus is widened.
The problem to tackle now refers to the educational inequalities
in terms of access to all levels and modalities of education, and to
inequalities involving school permanency, in view of the diversity
of users attending the system. The need to ensure support for their
formation process becomes clear in the form of several categories of
grants for the students or by incorporating in the school curriculum
the history and culture of groups historically discriminated. Many
strategies were used to tackle the problem, such as: increase in the
per capita investment; extension of the obligatory education from
children education to secondary cycle (increasing the obligatory
period of education from 9 to 13 years); expansion of technical
education; popularization of access to universities; extension of school
permanency policies in all levels, with improvements on scholarships,
transport, school meals, and other grants.
On the higher education level, the expansion centre grew from
the confrontation of historical and persistent inequalities of access to
higher education, especially through Affirmative Actions of racial and
social character, having a powerful symbolic impact in a country that
suffered, for almost 400 years, the ulcer of slavery. Besides especial
grants to quota holders at public schools, there is incentive for the
expansion of campus accommodation and university restaurants.
In 2003, the country had 45 federal public universities, distributed
by 148 campuses; in 2015 there were 63 federal public universities,
distributed by 321 campuses, characterizing an expressive expansion
and internalization of the system under the federal government’s
responsibility.
The impact caused by those policies was significant: reduction of
some of our most persistent educational inequalities, with the access
extension to the medium and high level of education, especially
among the poorer, the black population, women; Priority to the
North, Northeast and Centre-West regions of Brazil; extension of
the protection and support network, mobilized by the access to the
education system in all modalities and levels.
Nevertheless, we face persisting problems. Unfortunately, we still
have high rating of repetition and dropout at the basic level of education,
in special in the final years of the fundamental and secondary cycle. In
this way, at the same time we have progressed a lot in what concerns
important indices for measuring educational efficiency, we have made
it while maintaining serious problems yet to solve. Apparently, we
operate by the model described by Castel12 to think about the situation
experienced by Latin America in the last 15 years. These authors show
us that under the coordination of governments having a progressist
matrix, the rights in our National States have been extended. One of
the effects of this extension in countries with a long history of foreign
dependency, as is the case of all South American countries, has been
the general reduction of our historical inequalities and the expansion
of rights to the whole population, formerly deprived of them. By other
hand, it is also possible to notice, in those same countries, a resistance
to the capillarization of such policies and actions among the social
groups with a more vulnerable insertion.
Work policies
Deregulation and insecurity of the formal bonds with the working
world were important characteristics of the history of Brazilian
capitalism. We have an economic system that is not built on work
stability, but on its precariousness. This is true not only to youths but
also to adults belonging to the working class. This precarity does not
restrict itself to the economic sphere but is reproduced socially and
politically. Although Brazil changed a lot in the last years, we still
operate–and nowadays, more than ever–on a base that replicates itself
through the maintenance of such inequalities. But, as Guimarães6
shows, there are important particularities when facing the entrance
of youths in the working world in Brazil. Here we highlight some of
them:
1. Changes on productive sphere that affected the dynamics of
the labour market, and, in special, the base of the occupational
pyramid, extinguishing the jobs of “entrance”4
2. Coexistence with another demographic wave parallel to the
young wave,5 constituted by those who found themselves, in the
nineties, at the peak of their productive capacity 6
3. Poor quality of the labour market, with underpaid jobs, few
guarantees and long working hours. In this scenario, the youth
achieve transitions, at one time, intense and prospective “toward
work”, characterizing a process of constant in and out of the
labour market, search for better conditions and more qualified
Jobs. This is quite common among the youth, both for the poor
and middle class.
This situation imposes us some effects: unemployment among
youths is three times higher than among adults. Even in periods of full
employment there is a greater informality among the poorer youths,
the women and the black population. In fact, the context where the
schooling expands and the world of work insists in presenting itself as
not very permeable to youths, creates what Guimarães6 identified ten
years ago as a paradox: an expected social destination by the youth–a
transition with full social insertion - in confrontation to a lack of
chances for a big portion of the new generations. The work policies
Those unqualified Jobs through which the youths enter in the world of work
Demographic tendency to the growing of the youth population, giving the
country an “age bonus” regarding the capacity of development and production.
6
The youths who attempted to enter the labour market had to face the ones who
were already established on more stable bases.
4
5
3
Tendency of the public school system in Brazil, which serves the social groups
of vulnerable social insertion, to measure its effectiveness by the degree of
difficulty imposed to the school success of most of its users.
351
Citation: Pinheiro D, Ribeiro E, Peregrino M. School and work: elements to discuss youth in Brazil. Sociol Int J. 2018;2(5):349‒353.
DOI: 10.15406/sij.2018.02.00068
Copyright:
©2018 Pinheiro et al.
School and work: elements to discuss youth in Brazil
for the youth during the cycle of public policies that took place
between 2005 and 2015 has been distinguished attacking two fronts:
development of strategies of qualification and policies of subsidised
insertion of youths in the labour market. More recently, the bet was
on a combination of professional qualification and intermediation
for job insertion. However, as Gonzalez13 shows, the difficulties met
by the youth to get a decent job, in Brazil, do not occur because of
lack of qualification; as the author describes, the policies for youth
qualification and subsidised ingress fulfil different functions. In this
matter, qualification programs are much more effective generating
expectations of work than generating jobs.
We believe that great part of the difficulty to conciliate educational
policies and work comes from the specificity of each field. Thus, in
relation to education, the data and diagnosis are abundant and the
intervention in the educational systems are under the responsibility
of the State, making easier the identification of problems and the
answers from the other actors that, in great measure, keep certain
subjection, especially budgetary, to the federal government. The same
does not occur with the world of work, for private interests dominates
the so named “Market” and, despite of their dependency on transfer of
money and subsidies from the State, they function moved by their own
interests, strongly connected to the profit rate increase. In this case, we
believe, parallel policies, dialoguing with parallel interlocutors, trying
to achieve independent goals, will never solve the paradox performed
in their lives on daily bases.
Achievements, ruptures and retrocession
During the cycle of public policies between 2005 and 2015, Brazil
invested more than ever in raising youth education standards, focusing
on those that didn’t have access to school or had experienced it for
a short time, in troubled educational trajectories, especially youths
belonging to social groups that are more vulnerable. The data we
presented from this period shows that the investments made in some
sectors had an impact on the youth’s choices regarding their use of time,
especially when we observe the distribution between studying and
working. This cycle brought many advances, from the acceleration of
schooling for youths that were hold back in the fundamental education
to the expansion of secondary education. Its paradigmatic case is the
explosion of enrolments at universities, rising from 4,6 million in
2005 to 7,8 million in 2014, extending its geographic distribution with
a strong internalization of new universities, making the access more
democratic and investing in permanency policies.
The country has experienced changes in the processes and forms of
youth transition to adulthood that redefined the possible combination
between education and work. The first and most important is the
reduction of participation of youths aged 15 to 17 in the labour
market. It characterizes an unprecedented situation in the Brazilian
case, mostly for the youths of popular strata. They have been able
to experiment, for the first time, the scenario of being only students.
This is a reality for young women, principally. However, when we
observe the cohort gathering youths aged 18 to 29, what draws our
attention is the abrupt end of juvenile moratorium, namely the end of
the condition of being exclusively students. As one advances on the
age group, there is a loss of school centrality and a trajectory marked
by ins and outs of the school system and of the labour Market. This
is the cruellest characteristic of the current juvenile condition. The
key transformation occurred at this period was a significant change
on the strategies for the youth’s participation in the formulation,
352
implementation and evaluation of the policies destined to them. The
three Youth’s Public Policies National Conference held in 2008, 2011
and 2015, were spaces for participation of distinct juvenile collectives
where their rights were evaluated and proposals to extend those rights
came forward. Having the Conjuve leading the national mobilization
process, it happened through conferences that were organized in many
administrative and territorial levels around the country, gathering a
significant amount of youths which drew attention for their diversity
of aspects, cultures and proposals. These conferences mobilized
hundreds of thousands of youths and collectives to the National
Conference that, each edition, gathered in Brasília around three
thousand youths from all over the country.
In 2005, inclusion was the main goal of the policies destined
to the youth, but their increasing participation in the deliberative
processes fomented its critics and its extension, putting autonomy
and emancipation at the centre of the debates. With this key we can
understand the emphasis applied on defending decent work and
on the inclusion policies defended by the engaged youth. On the
horizon, it is necessary to overcome the current model that is timid
in regulating the relationship between education and work, throwing
responsibility exclusively on young people. This inclusive cycle ends
on the second President Dilma Roussef’s government (2011-2014 e
2015-2016), with an institutional rupture that was consequence of
a coup d’état in 2016, articulated by the parliament, dominated by
corporate lobbies with the support of the judiciary system, and with
a strong participation of the mainstream media. The objective of this
articulation is to bring the period of re-democratization initiated in
1985 to an end and implement a Project that some authors have named
as “non-democratic constitutional regimen”,14 or “post democratic
State”.15 The logic of state becomes contrary to the social rights
guarantees.
The retrocession is expressed in the proposals for the labour
reform that suspend acquired rights since 1930 and make the work
relationships more flexible and fragile. This equation favours
exclusively the big business. But the parliamentary coup is expressed
also in the reform of the secondary cycle of education. Both reforms
go against all youth’s recent demands, recreating the traditional
division between school “for the rich” and “for the poor”.16 To the
first group, will be destined an extended education, full of traditional
content, but incorporating also the humanistic dimension, with
the target of preparing the best staffs to the best jobs. To the poor
will be destined a fast education restricted to the basic abilities for
the unqualified ingress in the job market, urged to take jobs no one
wants. Likewise, the public universities have been through a process
of “asphyxia”, with drastic budget cut and reduction in the teaching
activities, research and university extension. In addition, there is the
dissemination of privatisation discourses aiming to stop the ongoing
expansion and democratisation of high education. However, a
virtuous cycle of public policies as we experimented recently leaves
marks on the institutions and students. This is not easy to forget,
because identities were forged and rights were constituted. The social
demands won’t be extinguished, and they will appear, in a certain way
organized manner, in the action of those people who had experienced
a more intense democratic process. Although the changes of mentality
must deal with a long sedimentation process, the strong juvenile
participation on this cycle reminds us of Paulo Freire’s “Pedagogia da
esperança”. In this book, he presents a very interesting concept that
he named “unprecedented viable”,17 that he defined as something that
has never been experimented, but nevertheless, is not impossible to
Citation: Pinheiro D, Ribeiro E, Peregrino M. School and work: elements to discuss youth in Brazil. Sociol Int J. 2018;2(5):349‒353.
DOI: 10.15406/sij.2018.02.00068
Copyright:
©2018 Pinheiro et al.
School and work: elements to discuss youth in Brazil
achieve. When we think about the Brazilian youth, with its importance
on the definition of a project for a sovereign nation, it becomes clear
that, more than ever, it is necessary to exercise the society’s ability to
bet on a new project. For this, it is necessary to keep the conditions
of dialogue involving the whole society, particularly the youth
themselves as important actors in the process of restoration of the
democratic normality in the country.18
Acknowledgements
None.
Conflict of interest
The author declares that there is no conflict of interest.
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Citation: Pinheiro D, Ribeiro E, Peregrino M. School and work: elements to discuss youth in Brazil. Sociol Int J. 2018;2(5):349‒353.
DOI: 10.15406/sij.2018.02.00068