THE TV Brasil presents a special edition of the Brasil no Mundo program dedicated to the situation in Venezuela. The program will air this Sunday (4), at 7:30 pm. Journalists Cristina Serra, Jamil Chade and Yan Boechat welcome economist Juliane Furno to comment together on the latest events following the United States attack on the South American country. With in-depth analyses, the program seeks to connect major global themes to the Brazilian reality.
Juliane Furno has a doctorate in economic sciences from the State University of Campinas (Unicamp) and a master’s degree from the same institution. Graduated in sociology from the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), she studied public policies aimed at the oil and gas sector and the transformations in the labor market for domestic workers during the Lula and Dilma governments. Currently, she is a special advisor to the Presidency of the National Bank for Economic and Social Development (BNDES) and is an adjunct professor at the State University of Rio de Janeiro (Uerj).
About production
The Brazil in the World program is dedicated to breaking down major global events with the depth that each topic requires. Conducted by journalists Cristina Serra, Jamil Chade and Yan Boechat, it presents consistent analyzes and, in each edition, it welcomes a guest who contributes to expanding the understanding of the international scenario and its effects on society.
Shown weekly on TV Brasil always on Sundays, at 7:30 pm, the program lasts one hour. Cristina Serra has worked as a journalist for around 40 years, having worked at Globo for 26 years, as a correspondent in New York, among other roles. Jamil Chade has worked for two decades as a correspondent for various vehicles at the UN office in Geneva, during which time he contributed to the BBC, CNN, Guardian and Brazilian vehicles. Yan Boechat has been covering international conflicts for 20 years for several outlets and has reported on-site in Africa, the Middle East, Russia and Latin America.
The program has already interviewed personalities such as the Minister of Environment and Climate Change, Marina Silva; ambassador André Corrêa do Lago, president of COP30; in addition to geographer Elias Jabbour
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