
Agriculture, corporative State and economic coordination
Dec 28, 2018 | Papers, Publications

Agriculture, corporative State and economic coordinationin the origins of salazarism: the National Board of Fruits, 1931 ‑1939
- Leonardo Aboim Pires
- 2018
- Revista Portuguesa de História
- Issue 49
- 241-255 p.
- Language: Portuguese
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.14195/0870-4147_49_11
- ISSN: 0870-4147
This article focuses on the issue of corporative economic coordination in the context of Estado Novo’s regime. Our scope is to understand the historical and political context that shaped the corporative doctrine and the problematics of this issue will be carried out through the analysis of a specific institution – the Junta Nacional das Frutas (National Board of Fruits). This way, we study the effects of corporatism in the agrarian politics of the Portuguese fascism in his beginning and the logic behind the application of these principals in Portugal.
Keywords:
“Estado Novo”; Corporatism; National Board of Fruits
Other publications
Search
Events
dezembro, 2025
Tipologia do Evento:
Todos
Todos
Colloquium
Conference
Conference
Congress
Course
Cycle
Debate
Exhibition
Launch
Lecture
Meeting
Movie session
Open calls
Opening
Other
Presentation
Round table
Seminar
Showcase
Symposium
Tour
Workshop
- Event Name
seg
ter
qua
qui
sex
sab
dom
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31

Detalhes do Evento
Meeting that aims to explore how the idea of ‘humanity’ is being unsettled, fragmented, and displaced across multiple domains. The Crises of the Human The boundaries of the human are
Ver mais
Detalhes do Evento
Meeting that aims to explore how the idea of ‘humanity’ is being unsettled, fragmented, and displaced across multiple domains.
The Crises of the Human
The boundaries of the human are under strain. Climate change reveals humanity as a geological force both destabilising and destabilised by the Earth system. Global pandemics highlight the microbial entanglements on which survival depends. Authoritarian movements redraw lines of inclusion and exclusion within the species. Artificial intelligence and biotechnology blur distinctions between human and machine. Can ‘humanity’ still function as a shared point of reference?
This meeting aims to explore how the idea of ‘humanity’ is being unsettled, fragmented, and displaced across multiple domains. Bringing together researchers from the University of St. Andrews, in Scotland, and the Associate Laboratory IN2PAST, in Portugal, as well as colleagues from other universities, the discussion combines ongoing research on different periods, geographies and themes, questioning relations between human and other humans, human and other species/nature, and human and other (technical) things.
Tempo
(Terça-feira) 2:00 pm - 6:00 pm
Organizador
News
‘Links with History’ wins an Iberian Heritage Award
Dec 10, 2025
It was the winner of the Best Partnership Project
António Cândido Franco honoured by the University of Évora
Dec 9, 2025
The commemorative session marked his retirement
History is at School! — New educational programme from the IHC
Dec 2, 2025
Programme aims to familiarise students with historical research and its tools
CONTACTS
WORKING HOURS





























































































































