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Brazil is a long-standing advocate of Security Council reform, pushing expansion in both permanent and non-permanent categories. It coordinates with the G4 — Brazil, Germany, India, Japan — and engages the African Union's Ezulwini Consensus on permanent African seats. 12
The case is structural: the Council reflects 1945, not the 21st-century order. Brazil is among the top historical contributors to UN peacekeeping — and has no permanent representation. 3
In committee terms: Brazil backs the Intergovernmental Negotiations framework and resists intermediate models — longer non-permanent terms without veto rights — framing reform as a question of legitimacy, not just representation. 45
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