Pedro had always hated maps. As a child, he found them reductive—turning the sprawling, chaotic poetry of Rio de Janeiro’s hills and alleys into cold, colored lines. As a law student, he hated Direito Constitucional for the same reason. It felt like a jungle: a thousand articles, a million jurisprudences, abstract principles floating like ghosts above the real world of contracts and crimes.
Interprets the laws and settles conflicts.The "Checks and Balances" system ensures no single branch becomes tyrannical by allowing one to oversee the other. 4. Organization of the State This defines the "shape" of the country.
The "Esquematizado" series for Constitutional Law is often split into two parts, which is a useful feature for organization: