top of page
< Back

Parenting in Brazil

Raising Young Babies in Brazil: Cultural Practices, Parenting Styles, and Early Childhood Development

Huu Ho

Introduction

Raising young babies in Brazil is a multifaceted endeavor shaped by deep historical roots, diverse cultural backgrounds, social and economic disparities, and modern developmental science. As the fifth most populous country in the world—and with the largest population in Latin America—Brazil’s child-rearing practices cannot be understood through a monolithic lens. From the vast Amazonian North to the cosmopolitan metropolises of the Southeast and the impoverished Northeast backlands, Brazilian infants are nurtured within the intersecting frameworks of local tradition, kinship networks, socioeconomic realities, and evolving state policies on early childhood.

This article offers an in-depth analysis of Brazilian parenting beliefs, practices, cultural models, and developmental outcomes for infants, with a focus on contemporary scientific research. It draws upon developmental psychology, anthropology, sociology, and official public policies, and includes embedded video links that illustrate key practices. The article is structured around key areas of infant care—feeding, sleeping, emotional bonding, and socialization—while paying special attention to regional variation, socioeconomic effects, and the influence of collective kinship networks. Scientific instruments for measuring early child development in Brazil, major intervention programs, and risk/protective factors are also examined.


Cultural Models and Parenting Beliefs in Brazilian Families

Historical and Cultural Foundations of Brazilian Parenting

Brazilian parenting reflects the nation’s complex historical tapestry—recent Indigenous legacy, the legacies of African slavery, centuries of European colonization, waves of immigration, and urbanization. Traditionally, the Brazilian family structure was patriarchal, often consisting of large extended families with a clear gendered division of labor: women primarily responsible for childcare and home, while men provided and exercised greater freedom outside the home. While these structures have undergone transformation, especially in urban and cosmopolitan areas, elements of collectivism, ritual kinship (compadrio), and community proximity remain highly relevant123.

Affection, Warmth, and Social Orientation

Brazilian parents are widely perceived as affectionate, warm, and emotionally expressive with their children. The parent-child relationship is most often characterized by explicit displays of love and a preference for dialogue over authoritarian control—although variations exist, especially along lines of region and class4. This style is grounded in a broader collectivist orientation: Brazilian society values interdependence, strong kin networks, and shared parenting responsibility.

Extended families, including grandparents, aunts, uncles, older siblings, as well as hired caregivers, are integral to raising young children. Rituals like compadrio (godparenthood) play an essential role in expanding a child’s support network, providing both spiritual and practical guidance—a practice still strong in rural areas and among the working class53.

Parental Ethnotheories and the Developmental Niche

The “developmental niche” framework proposed by Harkness and Super, as well as cultural-ecological theory from Tudge and colleagues, provide valuable models for analyzing Brazilian parenting1. Parental ethnotheories in Brazil often combine dimensions of autonomy and interdependence: parents seek to foster both a child’s agency and their connection to the group.

  • Proper Presentation: Importance attributed to socially accepted daily rules and public behaviors.

  • Stimulation: Value placed on stimulating the child’s cognitive, social, and emotional development.

  • Responsiveness and Bonding: Emphasis on responding immediately to children’s needs and fostering intense proximity.

Brazilian families generally emphasize socialization for group interaction, combining cognitive development with social integration. Parental education, particularly that of mothers, is a key predictor of beliefs favoring stimulation and autonomy.


Regional Variation and Socioeconomic Stratification

Brazil’s Geographical and Cultural Diversity

Brazil’s immense size translates into marked regional differences. The country is traditionally divided into five regions:

  • North (Amazonian): Influences from Indigenous traditions, challenges of remoteness, and lower economic indices.

  • Northeast: African descendant culture, deep historical poverty, higher infant mortality, ritual kinship practices.

  • Central-West: Frontier and agricultural influences, rising urbanization.

  • Southeast: Urban-industrial, cosmopolitan, wealthiest region (includes Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo).

  • South: Heavily influenced by European immigration (especially German, Italian), higher HDI, structured nuclear families.

Each region showcases specific child-rearing practices, influenced by ecological factors, immigration patterns, and local histories2.

City-Level Example

A study of 350 primiparous mothers in seven cities—each from different regions—demonstrated the following:

City

Region

Influences

Main Practices/Beliefs

Belém

North

Amazonian, Indigenous

Greater focus on tradition, group ties

João Pessoa

Northeast

Afro-Brazilian

Collectivist orientation, compadrio

Salvador

Northeast

Afro-Brazilian

Matriarchal elements, ritual inclusivity

Campo Grande

Central-West

Frontier, agricultural

Hybrid practices

Rio de Janeiro

Southeast

Cosmopolitan, multi-ethnic

Greater value on autonomy, stimulation

Florianópolis

South

German/Italian immigration

Nuclear family structure, stimulation

Porto Alegre

South

European lineage

Emphasis on education, autonomy

Mothers in the North and Northeast tend to give equal value to autonomy and relatedness, with strong ritual kinship ties, whereas mothers in the South and Southeast increasingly prioritize autonomy and stimulation, especially among the urban middle class. However, attachment to family and group remains strong across regions.

Socioeconomic Status and Maternal Education

Socioeconomic factors deeply affect parenting in Brazil. Lower income is closely linked with higher stress, less responsive caregiving, more authoritarian discipline, and reduced child development opportunities67. In urban shantytowns (favelas) and in the rural Northeast, child-rearing is marked by economic hardship, high fertility, and higher infant mortality risks, which may produce unique adaptive strategies, including “selective attachment” as a survival mechanism89.

By contrast, urban middle and upper-middle class families in larger cities may increasingly adopt autonomous-related parenting models (promoting both stimulation and independence), paralleling trends in Europe and North America—but still within a context that values family loyalty and warmth.


Feeding Practices: Breastfeeding, Complementary Foods, and Regional Challenges

National Attitudes and Institutional Support for Breastfeeding

Exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months is strongly promoted in Brazil, following World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines and national health policy. The “Golden August” campaign and the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI) promote breastfeeding as an act of love, nourishment, immunity, and emotional bonding101112. Human milk banks across many urban centers collect and distribute breastmilk—especially crucial for premature infants.

Video illustration: The Joy of Breastfeeding a Healthy Brazilian Baby showcases the intimacy and naturalness of breastfeeding in a Brazilian context, emphasizing maternal affection.

Key Data: In Rio de Janeiro, almost 90% of mothers breastfeed within 24 hours of delivery and at hospital discharge, with ~61% exclusively breastfeeding at two months postpartum. Public hospitals report higher rates of early breastfeeding initiation than private ones11.

Regional and Socioeconomic Determinants of Feeding

While breastfeeding is highly valued, barriers persist, with significant regional and class-based discrepancies:

  • Northeast/Brazilian backlands (sertão): Studies by Scheper-Hughes illustrate that under conditions of chronic poverty and high infant mortality, women sometimes practice “selective attachment and feeding”—delaying full commitment (and sometimes withholding breastmilk) to frail infants in anticipation of loss, or due to belief that breastfeeding saps maternal strength8913.

  • In shantytowns, contaminated water and lack of resources often lead to early introduction of gruels (mingau of manioc, sugar, and powdered milk), raising risks of malnutrition and infant illness.

  • National data links low maternal education, young maternal age, and low income to early weaning and poor complementary feeding practices, often resulting in nutritional deficits, anemia, and poorer health outcomes7.

Socio-cultural Traditions in Feeding

Among both Indigenous and Afro-Brazilian communities, traditional foods and feeding rituals are prevalent. However, under the pressures of urbanization and poverty, older traditions may give way to convenience foods or formula, exacerbated by aggressive marketing and hospital practices (such as pre-lacteal feeding), especially in the private sector11.

Policy and Public Health Intervention

Strong public and private health interventions, milk banks, professional training, community health workers, and educational campaigns all aim to protect breastfeeding, mitigate the risks of early weaning, and provide support to mothers in need of guidance or experiencing difficulties101211.


Infant Sleep Practices and Co-sleeping Traditions

Co-sleeping and Bed-Sharing

Brazilian families—especially outside urban, affluent enclaves—frequently practice co-sleeping or bed-sharing. It remains a cultural norm for infants to sleep in close proximity to their mothers or other caregivers, sometimes out of necessity (limited housing, security), but also out of emotional preference, perceived safety, and ease of nighttime breastfeeding141516.

This contrasts with American and Northern European norms, where independent sleep and solitary rooms are promoted as markers of autonomy and "good parenting." In Brazil, bodily proximity serves as a cornerstone of attachment and reassurance during early infancy.

Video illustration: 9 Cultural Differences in Parenting: Brazil vs. UK compares, among other aspects, sleep norms across cultural contexts.

Empirical Research: Brazilian Sleep Interventions

A major randomized controlled trial in Pelotas, Southern Brazil, tested whether sleep hygiene counseling could change sleep patterns in infants aged three months to two years141718. The intervention promoted:

  • Consistent nighttime routines

  • Sleep environment optimization (quiet, dark)

  • Teaching self-soothing/allowing slight delays in responding to night awakenings

While intervention infants initially slept ~20 minutes longer, there were no statistically significant differences in sleep duration at 12 or 24 months relative to controls. Most striking was the finding that, culturally, Brazilian babies go to bed and wake up about two hours later than children in wealthy countries; bed-sharing is common, rarely stigmatized, and often preferred by families for psychosocial reasons1514.

Sleep, Socioeconomic Status, and Health

Short sleep duration and nighttime waking are associated with metabolic, cognitive, and behavioral risks, but Brazilian intervention studies suggest that while sleep interventions can inform maternal practices, deeper structural factors (housing, stress, maternal workload) are not easily overcome by brief educational programs15.


Emotional Bonding, Maternal-Fetal Attachment, and Postpartum Bonding

Maternal-Fetal Attachment: Social and Psychological Determinants

Maternal-fetal attachment (MFA), the affective bond during pregnancy, predicts postpartum bonding and infant social-emotional development. Brazilian studies using culturally adapted versions of the Maternal-Fetal Attachment Scale (MFAS) confirm that MFA is associated with greater maternal sensitivity, breastfeeding, and cognitive stimulation, and that social support, intended pregnancy, and absence of depression are positive predictors192021.

  • Key finding: Each incremental increase in the MFA score at three months postpartum predicted an increase in infant social-emotional development scores, even after controlling for socioeconomic and maternal variables.

  • Postpartum depression and absence of a supportive partner are risk factors for impaired attachment and poor infant outcomes.

Cross-Cultural Nuances and Anthropological Perspectives

Research in impoverished regions—particularly the rural Northeast—has revealed unique adaptive strategies around attachment. In high-mortality, high-fertility settings, mothers sometimes delay giving infants a name or avoid intense early attachment, a practice shaped less by lack of love than survival logic and cultural adaptation to repeated bereavement89. Such distinctions challenge Western attachment theory’s universality and emphasize the role of macro-structural constraints in shaping maternal behaviors.

Video resource: Emotional Birth—Brazilian Family Vlog offers a real-life perspective on the emotional landscape around childbirth and immediate postpartum bonding in a Brazilian context22.


Socialization, Kinship Networks, and Community

The Extended Family and Compadrio

Socialization in Brazil is deeply intertwined with extended kin networks. Grandparents, aunts/uncles, cousins, and godparents (compadres and comadres) are active participants in the day-to-day lives of infants and young children. Compadrio is not merely ceremonial; it entails obligations of material, emotional, and sometimes spiritual support throughout the child’s life534.

Such networks provide resilience in the face of poverty or maternal absence, and, in times of crisis, may even take primary responsibility for caregiving. In many urban and rural communities, three generational households remain common, though urbanization and increased migration have triggered shifts toward nuclear families.

  • In African-descendant communities (especially in the Northeast), matriarchal elements and familial flexibility are more common, reflecting historical realities such as slavery and forced migration that disrupted nuclear bonds and required reliance on broader kin and fictive kin networks43.

Socialization Goals and Gender Socialization

Modern Brazilian families often aim to balance respect, obedience, and group belonging with fostering autonomy and self-expression, though these goals are mediated by gender, class, and region. Historical patterns show stricter supervision of girls and training in domestic tasks, but recent decades, especially in urban areas, have seen greater gender equity and flexibility in childhood roles and socialization practices4.

  • Respect, honesty, and work ethic remain core values transmitted across classes. However, there is increasing concern, especially among the middle class, about excessive permissiveness in child-rearing, echoing global trends in "intensive parenting" debates.

Video resource: Brazilian Jiu Jitsu for Kids (and Parents!) highlights modern approaches to child socialization through community-oriented physical activity.


Societal and Political Frameworks: Policies and Early Childhood Interventions

Legal Framework for Early Childhood (Marco Legal da Primeira Infância, Law No. 13.257/2016)

Brazil has developed one of the most robust legal and policy frameworks for early childhood in Latin America. The Legal Framework for Early Childhood:

  • Defines early childhood as birth to six years of age

  • Asserts children’s absolute priority in state policies

  • Mandates intersectoral strategies for health, education, and social inclusion

  • Requires public and private sectors to promote comprehensive child development, focusing on health, nutrition, protection, culture, and play

  • Places special emphasis on disadvantaged, at-risk, and disabled children, requiring home visiting and specialized early intervention for those with risk or developmental delays2324.

Major National and Regional Programs

Primeira Infância Melhor (PIM—Better Early Childhood)

PIM, originating in Rio Grande do Sul, is a pioneering home visitation program targeting families in conditions of social vulnerability. It employs weekly home visits, draws on developmental science (Vygotsky, Piaget, Bowlby), and emphasizes community, intersectorality, and family as core pillars. PIM supports comprehensive child development (physical, cognitive, social, emotional) and is recognized as a key innovation in Latin American early childhood care25.

Criança Feliz Program

Launched in 2016, Criança Feliz focuses on social-emotional skill development, cognitive stimulation, nutrition, and parental empowerment for at-risk families, integrating home visits and connections to health, nutrition, and education services. Its overarching goal is to break generational cycles of poverty and foster children’s (and family’s) agency for long-term socio-economic change26.

Human Milk Banks and the Milk Route

Brazil’s internationally recognized national network of milk banks supports breastfeeding, especially for premature and hospitalized infants, by collecting, pasteurizing, and distributing human milk. Community health workers play a crucial role in encouraging milk donation and supporting lactating mothers10.

Assessment Tools and National Research

Brazilian adaptation, validation, and regular use of internationally recognized developmental assessment tools, such as the Denver II developmental screening, Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development, Alberta Infant Motor Scale (AIMS), Ages and Stages Questionnaire (ASQ-BR), and the Survey of Well-being of Young Children (SWYC-BR), have been key in monitoring and guiding national and regional early childhood interventions6272829.

A recent national survey using SWYC-BR found that 54% of children under five had a development quotient below normative expectations for age, with significant disadvantage in the North and lower socioeconomic segments, underscoring persistent challenges of equity and access6.


Risk and Protective Factors in Early Childhood Development

Risk Factors

The development of Brazilian children is undermined by an array of risk factors:

  • Poverty and Vulnerable SES: Strongest predictor of developmental delay, affecting one-third or more of infants in certain regions67.

  • Low Parental Education: Deprives children of cognitive stimulation and is linked to poor health and nutrition.

  • Maternal Stress, Depression, and Poor Mental Health: Diminishes responsiveness, attachment, and emotional availability.

  • Malnutrition, Anemia, and Inadequate Complementary Feeding: Linked to low maternal education and poverty.

  • Poor Sanitation and Housing: Especially in favelas, increases risk for infectious diseases and impaired development.

  • Prematurity and Low Birth Weight: Particularly prevalent in the North and Northeast, associated with poorer neurodevelopmental outcomes.

  • Absence of Father/Partner: Predictive of worse emotional and cognitive outcomes76.

Protective Factors

Despite these challenges, several protective factors have strong, evidence-based associations with improved outcomes:

  • Supportive and Stimulating Home Environments: Involving play, safe spaces, variety of toys, and positive adult interactions27.

  • Continued and Exclusive Breastfeeding: Associated with reduced morbidity and improved cognitive outcomes1110.

  • High Maternal Education and Family Income: Predictors of better health, nutrition, and early language and cognitive development.

  • Comprehensive Early Intervention Programs: Home visitation, educational campaigns, and linkage with health/education services.

  • Quality Early Childhood Education: Attendance at daycare or preschool (especially private, though public programs are expanding) is linked to higher developmental quotients6.

Instruments for Assessment and Monitoring

Brazil employs and adapts robust developmental screening and observation tools, including:

Instrument

Domains Assessed

Adapted/Validated for Brazil?

Denver II, Bayley III, Alberta Infant Motor Scale (AIMS), ASQ-BR, SWYC-BR

Personal-social, fine/gross motor, language, cognition, socioemotional, health, home environment

Daily Activities of Infant Scale (DAIS)

Parental practices, daily activities

Partial

These methodologies have high validity and reliability within the Brazilian context, facilitating both large-scale surveillance and targeted interventions2827.


The Interplay of Culture, Structure, and Modernity

Persistence and Transformation

Brazilian parenting is at once tenaciously rooted in tradition and dynamically adaptive. Urbanization, internal migration, and women’s increased labor force participation have shifted patterns of caregiving from extended kin networks to more nuclear family arrangements, especially in cities. However, the extended family remains highly influential—often providing essential material and emotional scaffolding for young families, especially those challenged by economic insecurity.

Parallel to these changes, state policies and intervention programs are attempting to address the profound inequalities in opportunity for Brazilian children, attempting to build "nurturing care" environments within the Nurturing Care Framework of the WHO6.

The Role of Ritual and Spirituality

From the ritual appointment of godparents (compadrio) to distinctive Indigenous, Afro-Brazilian, and European-influenced customs, spiritual practices and supernatural beliefs remain important in early childrearing. For example, newborns are often dressed in red to ward off evil spirits and are showered with protective blessings in both urban and rural settings30.


Conclusion

Raising babies in Brazil is a story of care, struggle, resilience, and adaptation. Brazilian families, across their many regional and social variations, are characterized by warmth, affection, and an enduring commitment to both collective identity and, increasingly, to the individual autonomy of children. The challenges are profound—ranging from poverty, inequality, and persistent regional disparities, to structural and cultural legacies—but the response has been multifaceted: an embrace of both tradition and innovation, collective action, and a growing state-led commitment to early intervention.

Scientific research continues to shed light on the dynamic interplay among biological, psychological, and socio-cultural factors in early development. Evidence-based policies and intervention programs, robust developmental monitoring, and the resilience of Brazilian families are central to closing developmental gaps and ensuring that all of Brazil’s children are nurtured to reach their potential.


Recommended Video Resources


Tables: Snapshot of Regional and Policy Variables

Region

Cultural Influence

Key Infant Care Traits

Socioeconomic Status

North

Indigenous/Amazonian

Collective sleeping, group childcare

Low HDI, low income

Northeast

African, ritual kin, matriarchy

Ritual kinship, compadrio, resilience amid high mortality

Low HDI, highest poverty

Central-West

Agricultural frontier

Hybridized parenting, increasing urban influence

Medium HDI

Southeast

Cosmopolitan, urban middle class

Emphasis on stimulation, autonomy

High HDI, wealthiest

South

European descent (German, Italian)

Structured, nuclear, education-focused

High HDI


Final Thoughts

Brazilian infant care weaves together threads of affection, adversity, policy, and pride. Despite daunting challenges—persistent poverty, uneven access to services, and historical inequities—Brazilian parents and communities continually generate flexible, adaptive responses. As the country pushes forward new evidence-based policies, supports breastfeeding with world-class infrastructure, and builds on rich kinship traditions, the raising of Brazil’s youngest remains a profoundly social act—always collective, sometimes improvised, never without hope.


For a more visual and human perspective on what these practices look like in everyday life, we suggest browsing the video links above, which give authentic, first-person insight into Brazilian families navigating the beginnings of life.


References (30)

1Children, Families, and Communities in Brazil: A Cultural-Ecological .... https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-94-024-0927-7_78

2The Cultural Landscape of Brazil | LAC Geo. https://lacgeo.com/cultural-landscape-brazil

3Compadresco - Encyclopedia.com. https://www.encyclopedia.com/humanities/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/compadresco

4How Do Parents Teach Theur Children Rules In Brazil. https://storychanges.com/in-brazil-how-do-parents-impart-rules-to-their-children.html

5(PDF) Compadrio in rural Brazil: structural analysis of a ritual .... https://www.academia.edu/112235717/Compadrio_in_rural_Brazil_structural_analysis_of_a_ritual_institution

6Factors associated with early childhood development: results from the .... https://bmjpublichealth.bmj.com/content/3/1/e001516

7Social vulnerability among Brazilian children in early childhood: a .... https://jped.elsevier.es/en-social-vulnerability-among-brazilian-children-articulo-S0021755724000998

8Lifeboat ethics | 29 | v8 | Mother love and child death in Northeast B. https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9781003398349-29/lifeboat-ethics-nancy-scheper-hughes

9Infant Death in Northeast Brazil - JSTOR. https://www.jstor.org/stable/3630630

10Golden August: Health offers services and actions to encourage .... https://en.prefeitura.rio/noticias/agosto-dourado-saude-oferece-servicos-e-acoes-de-incentivo-a-amamentacao/

11Hospital practices and breastfeeding in Rio de Janeiro: data from the .... https://rsp.fsp.usp.br/wp-content/uploads/articles_xml/1518-8787-rsp-59-s1-e7s/1518-8787-rsp-59-s1-e7s.pdf

12Breastfeeding promotion, protection, and support in primary health care .... https://www.directimpact.comminit.com/content/breastfeeding-promotion-protection-and-support-primary-health-care-state-rio-de-janeiro

13Infant mortality and infant care: Cultural and economic constraints on .... https://psycnet.apa.org/record/1985-19941-001

14Counseling for healthy sleep habits during childhood: a randomized .... https://www.grandchallengesbrazil.org/en/projects/counseling-for-healthy-sleep-habits-during-childhood-a-randomized-controlled-trial/

15Infant sleep hygiene counseling (sleep trial): protocol of a randomized .... https://bmcpsychiatry.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12888-016-1016-1

16cosleeping: cultural norms around the world and in the U.S.. https://heysleepybaby.com/cosleeping-cultural-norms-around-the-world-and-in-the-us/

17Effect of Parental Counseling on Infants' Healthy Sleep Habits in .... https://europepmc.org/article/MED/31860110

18Effect of Parental Counseling on Infants' Healthy Sleep Habits in .... https://experts.illinois.edu/en/publications/effect-of-parental-counseling-on-infants-healthy-sleep-habits-in-

19Validade de construto e confiabilidade da versão brasileira da Escala .... https://cadernos.ensp.fiocruz.br/ojs/index.php/csp/article/view/8212

20Abbreviated Version of the Maternal-Fetal Attachment Scale ... - SciELO. https://www.scielo.br/j/paideia/a/QfHCmjXBfC3hKkLJWS9cmrN/?format=pdf

21Construct validity and reliability of the Brazilian version of the. https://www.scielosp.org/article/csp/2023.v39n5/e00133922/

22THAT BRAZILIAN COUPLE OFFICIAL LABOR & DELIVERY!! ** Emotional birth. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IoQvqrykOFo

23L13257 - Planalto. https://www.planalto.gov.br/ccivil_03/_ato2015-2018/2016/lei/l13257.htm

24Lei nº 13.257 de 08/03/2016 - normas.leg.br. https://normas.leg.br/?urn=urn:lex:br:federal:lei:2016-03-08;13257

25Programa Primeira Infância Melhor (PIM) - Secretaria da Saúde. https://saude.rs.gov.br/programa-primeira-infancia-melhor-pim

26Pires - American Review of Political Economy. https://arpejournal.com/article/id/243/

27Cognition and environment are predictors of infants’ motor development .... https://revistas.usp.br/fpusp/article/download/115923/113439

28DAIS | Daily Activities of Infants Scale described in ePROVIDE. https://eprovide.mapi-trust.org/instruments/daily-activities-of-infants-scale

29Daily Activities of Infants Scale - canchild.ca. https://canchild.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/DAIS2004.pdf?license=yes

30Baby Birth Traditions - Brazil - UC Baby. https://www.ucbaby.ca/baby-birth-traditions-brazil


© 2025 ដោយ hibaby.ai

ការចាប់ផ្តើមប្រកបដោយភាពច្នៃប្រឌិតដោយ Brainfiniti (សិង្ហបុរី UEN: 53465904K) ដែលបង្កើតឡើងដោយសាកលវិទ្យាល័យ Nanyang Technological University NTUitive ។

bottom of page