Genealogy of the perfect crime according to Muniz Sodré

Sociologist Muniz Sodré discusses feminicide as an endemic issue in Brazil, rooted in historical silences and patriarchal dichotomies. He highlights the end of the violence of silence due to laws and feminist movements. The column emphasizes the need for education to prevent violence against women.

Muniz Sodré, sociologist and emeritus professor at UFRJ, publishes in Folha de S.Paulo a reflection on the 'genealogy of the perfect crime,' referring to violence against women. He explains that feminicide is not a recent epidemic but a cultural endemic that has always existed, varying by region. The current shock stems from the end of the silence imposed on victims and authorities, which previously minimized statistics due to the restricted female voice in public and private spaces.

Sodré credits advances to laws like the Maria da Penha Law and movements like Me Too, which raised women's awareness of the complicity produced by symbolic silence. He draws historical parallels: just as blacks and indigenous people emerged as organic intellectuals against racism, women now claim their speaking place. Violence, according to him, originates from absolute dichotomies like man/woman, where patriarchalism imposes submission, exemplified in Islamic dictatorships or high rape rates in India.

In Brazil, there are four feminicides per day, but police and judiciary are compelled to act, with discussion labs being established. Harsher punishments are ineffective without prevention; the focus should be on education from childhood to higher education. At the core, the macho denial of women's autonomous voice constitutes the 'perfect crime,' triggering narcissistic fury that leads to murders or assaults.

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Courtroom illustration from the Agostina Vega femicide case, showing suspects receiving preventive prison orders.
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Preventive prison ordered for three in Agostina Vega femicide case

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Córdoba justice ordered preventive prison on Wednesday for Claudio Barrelier, Osvaldo Fassetta and Soledad Andreani over the femicide of 14-year-old Agostina Vega. Prosecutor Raúl Garzón issued the ruling, while a fourth suspect remains without resolution. The victim's mother was accepted as a plaintiff.

Hundreds of women gathered on Avenida Paulista in São Paulo on Saturday (April 25) to demand approval of bill PL 896/23, which criminalizes misogyny. The protest came a day after Chamber president Hugo Motta announced a working group to discuss the bill, approved by the Senate in March. The event was called by Levante Mulheres Vivas.

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São Paulo state recorded 86 feminicides from January to March 2026, the highest for a first quarter since 2018, up 41% from 2025. March saw the most cases in the historical series, with 30 occurrences. The Public Security Secretariat highlights measures to combat violence against women.

The São Paulo Public Ministry requested that DECAP investigate misogynistic comments against Maria Eduarda Rodrigues de Freitas, 21, who died in a rope jump without ropes.

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