Brasília

Location:

Intro

Located on Brazil’s central plateau, Brasília was designed to project state authority inland and rebalance national development. It concentrates federal governance within a purpose-built urban form.

Background

Inaugurated in 1960, Brasília replaced Rio de Janeiro as capital. Designed by Lúcio Costa and Oscar Niemeyer, it embodied modernist planning and strong executive centralization.

History

Planning and construction

Inauguration as national capital

Centralized governance consolidation

Democratic institutions embedded

Administrative expansion and metropolitan growth

Present Day

Brasília hosts federal ministries, the presidency, congress, and supreme court. Urban governance manages a commuter-based metropolitan region with sharp socio-spatial separation.

Future Outlook

Brasília will remain Brazil’s political command center. Long-term challenges include metropolitan integration, service delivery beyond the core plan, and sustaining institutional legitimacy.

Population
3100000

Map


Articles

report

Russia’s War Machine: How It Fights Without Winning

As negotiations flicker in the background of a grinding war, Russia’s ability to sustain its military effort in Ukraine depends on a fragile web of foreign supply, internal mobilization, and retrofitted Soviet stockpiles. This report examines the current state of Russia’s armed forces in Q2 2025, revealing a system stretched but still operational — and why that matters.

reflection

Don’t Bet on the Bully: Why Europe Must Stop Investing in the U.S.

As European firms like Daimler, Volkswagen, and Siemens expand their investments in the U.S., they risk tying their futures to a volatile partner. Short-term economic incentives and a temporarily favorable exchange rate obscure deeper structural risks: political instability, panic-driven corporate culture, and growing protectionism. Europe is not dependent on the U.S. — not for gas, not for markets, and certainly not for leadership. Strategic autonomy begins with saying no.

report

After the War: The Eurasian Covenant

“After the War: The Eurasian Covenant” is not a deal, nor a surrender — but a framework. A vision for lasting peace between Europe, Ukraine, and Russia rooted in dignity, realism, and historical awareness. As old alliances shift and global power balances evolve, this proposal outlines a European-led path forward: balancing security, rebuilding trust, and preparing for a post-hegemonic world. A beginning — before it’s too late.

Event Timeline

988 AD
1569–1795

Polish-Lithuanian Rule over Ukraine

Before Moscow, there was Lublin. The Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth laid the groundwork for Western Ukrainian identity — and for centuries of contested rule.

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