Djamila Ribeiro’s website has a new look

Redação

February 24, 2026

We are pleased to present the new visual identity of Djamila Ribeiro’s official website. With a renewed graphic design and direct integration with the Brazilian philosopher’s social media platforms, the updates aim to reorganize and enhance the browsing experience.

The reformulation preserves the already consolidated content — including biography, books, news, agenda, and institutional information prominently featured — while introducing a layout that prioritizes fluid reading and a new hierarchy of information.

At the top of the page, Instagram, YouTube, Facebook, and LinkedIn icons provide direct access to the channels through which Djamila engages with different audiences. Another highlight is the option to subscribe to our newsletter. Upon accessing the site, readers can sign up to receive exclusive content directly via email, without algorithmic intermediaries.

The updates respond to a contemporary dynamic: public debate now unfolds across multiple digital environments, and the circulation of ideas requires an articulated presence.

The website’s visual renewal, conceived by FutureBrand São Paulo, reinforces this principle by consolidating an official space that is organized and aesthetically aligned with the author and activist’s intellectual trajectory. It strengthens independent communication channels in a digital environment increasingly marked by misinformation and fragmentation.

In symbolic and communicational terms, modernizing digital platforms represents, on one hand, a concrete strategy to confront structures of misinformation and, on the other, an expansion of democratizing channels: it broadens reach, reduces noise, and facilitates access to original content.

The new interface also reflects the international dimension of Djamila’s work, maintaining versions in Portuguese, English, and French. Soon, we will share further updates regarding the space dedicated to international readers and supporters.

In short, the updated design brings coherence to her digital presence and consolidates the website as the central hub of the author’s public work.

More than an aesthetic change, the new visual identity reaffirms the importance of communicational autonomy. In times of intense narrative disputes, organizing one’s online presence is a political act.

Content translated via artificial intelligence

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