MIGRATION AND REFUGEMENT DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC ON THE BRAZILPERU BORDER
MIGRATION; REFUGE; COVID-19 PANDEMIC; HUMAN RIGHTS; DEMOCRATIC ITERATIONS
The current work aims to understand the actions of the Brazilian State in the face of the humanitarian crisis of Venezuelan migrants and refugees on the Brazil-Peru border after the declaration of the State of Calamity in the country during the Covid-19 Pandemic in 2020. To achieve this objective, The main focus of the research was the analysis of the concepts of shared vulnerability, human interdependence and global solidarity described by Judith Butler and Zygmund Bauman, as well as Seyla Benhabib's concepts of cosmopolitanism and democratic interactions focused on the migration issue in the specific case of human rights violations against Venezuelans in Acre. Questions relating to the standards of health control restrictions provided for in the ordinances in 2020 and the need for effective international protection of Venezuelan migrants during the Covid-19 pandemic are considered. The research methodology was essentially theoretical and explanatory, using bibliographic research as its data source. The perspective of democratic iterations proved to be useful, as it aims to achieve and implement human rights on a global scale, based on the cosmopolitan vision of the duty of hospitality and contemporary global solidarity