Mothers from different regions of Brazil reflect on the inequalities that afflict Brazilian motherhood: obstetric violence, obstetric racism, concerns about income, unpaid domestic work, support networks, health, food security, and ancestry.
What does it mean to play and be a child in Brazil? Dreams and accents of children and young people from the country's 5 regions speak about school, food, the climate crisis, and the environment.
Inequalities in access to education and decent work in urban and rural areas, as seen by young people from the theater, an app-based driver, an indigenous anthropologist, and Brazilian workers and activists.
Brazilians aged between 60 and 82 talk about their experiences of aging amid the country's inequalities, addressing the environment, family ties, the trans community, life with a disability, health, and spirituality.