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Brazil tries to educate children who often live hours by river from the nearest town.
A two-part series on Brazil's unequal education system.
A two-part series on Brazil's unequal education system.
Poor one day and rich the next, our correspondent samples the best of Sao Paulo's street food and haute cuisine. Both are scrumptious and far more varied than you'd expect.
How does a family of eight live on government checks for $70 a week?
Why are Brazilians of all ages obsessively collecting trading cards? Hint: World Cup.
Lula won uncommon praise at home for brokering a nuclear deal in Tehran. The UN had other ideas.
A neighborhood sits on dangerous methane-filled ground. Half the residents left. The others have refused.
The Silvas are a rare working-class family who broke into elite cultural circles.
The war in Iraq, Brazil's nuclear history and its desire to be an international mediator explain the two disparate countries’ relationship.
Corporations are scrambling to understand and cater to millions of new Brazilian consumers.
A braces-wearing police officer well supplied with candy is helping try to take back Rio's slums.
Carnaval is not for the anti-social, the impatient or the insistently hygienic.
Will a storied samba school regain past greatness with this year's float?
Brazil's exports to Iraq have exploded in the last year and poultry is leading the charge.
A manioc flour salesman in the Amazon aspires to musical fame. His customers aren't so convinced.
Afro-Brazilians still care more about Obama's symbolism than about particular policies.
Residents adapt as town known for its charming colonial buildings and Carnaval finds itself underwater.
Analysis: The custody battle over Sean Goldman reflects the ups and downs of US-Brazil relations.
His departure came after a frenzied scene at the American Consulate in Rio de Janeiro.
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