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A dominant minority, also called elite dominance, is a minority group that has overwhelming political, economic, or cultural dominance in a country, despite representing a small fraction of the overall population (a demographic minority). The term is most commonly used to refer to an ethnic group that is defined along racial, national, religious, cultural or tribal lines and that holds a disproportionate amount of power and wealth compared to the rest of the population.
In contrast, minority rule, of less permanency and with no basis in race or ethnicity, is often seen when a political party holds a majority in political structures and decisions, but receiving less than the majority of votes in an election.
A notable example is that of South Africa during the apartheid regime, where white South Africans, more specifically Afrikaners, wielded predominant control of the country, despite never composing more than 22 percent of the population.[1] African-American-descended nationals in Liberia, white Zimbabweans in Rhodesia,[2] and the Tutsi in Rwanda since the 1990s also have been cited as current or recent examples.[3]
In Brazil, despite forming the plurality of its population (45.3%),[4] pardos are more affected by poverty, have a higher illiteracy rate, are more likely to be murdered,[5] and are most likely to live in favelas (Brazilian Portuguese slang for a slum). In contrast, the white population in the country (42.8%) has, on average, better access to education, job opportunities, and a higher wage, with the white workforce earning 80% more than black Brazilians.[6][7][8] Black and pardo Brazilians are underrepresented in Congress, with 71.9% of elected deputies being white, while 21.1% are pardos, and 5.3% are black.[9][10]
Nos Estados Unidos, segundos dados do Economic Policy Institute, homens brancos ganham em média 36% a mais do que homens negros, enquanto no Reino Unido, esse diferencial é de cerca de 15% entre ambas populações (incluindo homens e mulheres). O Brasil, por sua vez, apresenta uma disparidade muito mais elevada: brancos entre 18 e 59 anos na força de trabalho ganham cerca de 82% a mais do que aqueles de cor/raça parda ou preta (doravante negros).[In the United States, according to data from the Economic Policy Institute, white men earn on average 36% more than black men, while in the United Kingdom, this gap is around 15% between both populations (including men and women). Brazil, on the other hand, has a much higher disparity: whites aged between 18 and 59 in the workforce earn around 82% more than those of pardo or black color/race (from now on blacks).]
Non-whites are major victims of human rights abuses, including widespread police violence. On average, brown Brazilians earn half of the income of the white population. Most notably, the middle class and the elite are almost entirely white, so Brazil's well-known melting pot only exists among the working class and the poor. Non-white Brazilians were rarely found in the country's top universities, until affirmative action began in 2001.
Neste ano, o cenário após a votação é de 135 negros vitoriosos nas urnas (108 pardos e 27 pretos), o equivalente a 26% das vagas. Os brancos são 369, e ocuparão 72% das cadeiras na Câmara.[This year, after the vote, 135 blacks were victorious at the polls (108 pardos and 27 blacks), equivalent to 26% of the seats. There are 369 whites, and they will occupy 72% of the seats in the National Congress]