Brazil Uses Portuguese-Language Ties to Strengthen African Alliances
Brazil is leveraging its Portuguese-language heritage as a strategic diplomatic tool to deepen ties with the Portuguese-speaking African countries (PALOP) and the Community of Portuguese Language Countries (CPLP). This foreign policy shift aims to reduce dependence on the Global North by building stronger alliances within the Global South. The article outlines how technical cooperation and cultural affinity underpin Brazil's contemporary engagement with African nations such as Angola, Mozambique, and Cape Verde. The CPLP serves as a transregional platform connecting South America, Africa, and Europe. The analysis proposes a cooperation agenda that uses Lusophony as a geopolitical resource to enhance Brazil's autonomy in a multipolar world.
Global Impact
Politically, Brazil's Lusophony strategy reinforces its leadership in the Global South and challenges traditional North-South dependency structures. Economically, it could redirect investment flows toward Portuguese-speaking African nations, creating new supply chains and reducing reliance on Chinese or Western capital.