Project Document (Pims 3600)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Project Document (Pims 3600) PROJECT DOCUMENT (PIMS 3600) United Nations Development Programme Global Environment Facility Ministry of Environment (MMA) and National Indigenous Foundation (FUNAI) Federative Republic of Brazil BRA/09/G32- CATALYZING THE CONTRIBUTION OF INDIGENOUS LANDS TO THE CONSERVATION OF BRAZIL’S FOREST ECOSYSTEMS Brief description : Brazil’s National Biodiversity Policy (NBP) identifies conservation through protected areas (PAs) as central to protecting the country’s megadiversity and has, therefore, established a goal to have 10% of each of Brazil’s 6 biomes classified as PAs. The current National System of Conservation Units (SNUC) covers approximately 12% of the territory, however this does not achieve adequate protection for all forest biomes nor does it include many sites defined as high priority for forest conservation. To this end, Brazil’s 611 Indigenous Lands (ILs) represent a significant opportunity. They promote the physical and cultural safety of indigenous people (IPs) - often referred to as ecosystem or forest people - and consequently, through indigenous traditional natural resource management strategies and cultural beliefs, these lands protect forest biodiversity and the services provided by these ecosystems. ILs cover as much, if not more area, than the current SNUC system, and many contain forests identified as priorities for conservation. Others are strategically located in sites critical for connectivity between PAs within SNUC, or for inter-biome transition zones. However, given external and internal pressures on ILs, the ability of indigenous peoples (IPs) to continue their traditional, cost- effective conservation strategies is being compromised. Threats to biodiversity in ILs can be grouped according to (i) those arising from land uses outside ILs ( such as monoculture cultivation, intensive cattle ranching and urbanization); (ii) those arising from the extraction of resources by non-IPs that encroach on IL territory (such as logging, hunting, prospecting for mineral wealth); and (iii) those arising from the over exploitation of resources by IPs within the ILs (such as subsistence and commercialization needs). The main barriers to consolidating the conservation of forest biodiversity in ILs are: (i) gaps and inconsistencies in policies, institutional mandates and capacities that inhibit ILs from receiving effective support for conservation, (ii) weak operational management capacities to optimize the role of ILs in biodiversity conservation, and (iii) limited knowledge and skills among IPs to develop sustainable production practices that do not undermine the resource base while also meeting the economic needs of IPs. While the Brazilian government has provided a strong legislative basis for recognizing the rights of IPs to ILs and also undertaken several programs and projects of support, there remain challenges to fully realizing the conservation potential of ILs. Global benefits currently delivered by ILs will be eroded overtime and a significant opportunity to maximize and sustain IPs conservation of forest biodiversity will be lost along with irreparable losses in ethno-cultural and spiritual diversity. The proposed Alternative is to adopt a ground-tested and officially recognized strategy for environmental management in Indigenous Lands (IL) by Indigenous Peoples (IP) for the effective conservation and sustainable use of forest biodiversity. The Project will achieve this through the following three Outcomes and their related Outputs: (i) Mechanisms and tools have been developed that enable Brazil’s ILs to be recognized and strengthened as effective areas for conserving forest biodiversity, natural resources and the environmental services, (ii) A network of ILs modeling environmental management practices for conservation in different forest biomes is in place and is being effectively managed by the indigenous peoples and organizations, and (iii) Sustainable and replicable models of forest management , based on ethno-management principles, are piloted in selected ILs from different forest biomes. Direct global benefits to be delivered include: an increase in the area (4,563,933ha) of representative forest ecosystems of Brazil under conservation through the recognized environmental goals of ILs located in areas of high priority for biodiversity conservation; maintaining forest habitats in these areas at same or higher levels; improved connectivity between PAs; and improved management effectiveness in the RAs. TABLE OF CONTENTS SECTION A: ELABORATION OF THE NARRATIVE .................................................................................... 7 PART A.1 SITUATION ANALYSIS ....................................................................................................................... 7 1.1 Globally Significant Biodiversity and Brazil’s Indigenous Lands.................................................................. 7 1.2. Cultural and Socio-Economic Context of Brazil’s Indigenous People........................................................ 11 Amazon Biome.................................................................................................................................................................11 Caatinga and northeast part of Atlantic Forest..................................................................................................................12 Cerrado and Pantanal Biomes...........................................................................................................................................12 Atlantic Forest in the South of Brazil ...............................................................................................................................13 1.3 Threats to Biodiversity in Indigenous Lands ................................................................................................ 14 1.3.1 External threats to Indigenous Lands.......................................................................................................................15 1.3.2 Encroachment into Indigenous Lands......................................................................................................................15 1.3.3 Internal threats from overuse ...................................................................................................................................16 1.4. Legislative, Policy, Institutional, and Programming Context...................................................................... 16 1.4.1 Legislative and policy context .................................................................................................................................17 1.4.2 Baseline programs related to Indigenous Lands ......................................................................................................18 1.5 Long-Term Solution for Reducing Threats to Biodiversity in ILs................................................................. 20 1.6 Barriers to Consolidating the Conservation of Forest Biodiversity in ILs ................................................... 20 1.6.1 Gaps and inconsistencies in policies, institutional mandates and capacities............................................................20 1.6.2 Weak operational management capacities to optimize the role of ILs in biodiversity conservation........................21 1.6.3 Limited knowledge and skills among IPs to develop sustainable production practices ...........................................24 PART A.2 PROJECT STRATEGY................................................................................................................ 25 2.1 Conformity of the Project with GEF Policies ............................................................................................... 27 2.2 Project Goal, Objective, Outcomes, Outputs and Activities ......................................................................... 27 2.3 Project Indicators, Assumptions and Risks................................................................................................... 45 2.4 Expected Global, National and Local Benefits............................................................................................. 48 2.5 Country Ownership: Country Eligibility and Country Drivenness............................................................... 49 2.5.1 Country Eligibility...................................................................................................................................................49 2.5.2 Link to National Strategies ......................................................................................................................................50 2.5.3 Link with ongoing UNDP Programs and Projects ...................................................................................................51 2.6 Sustainability ................................................................................................................................................ 52 2.7 Replicability.................................................................................................................................................. 53 2.8 Stakeholders Participation ........................................................................................................................... 54 2.9 Outcome/ Output Budget and Cost-Effectiveness ......................................................................................... 55 Cost Effectiveness ............................................................................................................................................................57
Recommended publications
  • Redalyc.Kinship Studies in Brazil
    VIBRANT - Vibrant Virtual Brazilian Anthropology E-ISSN: 1809-4341 [email protected] Associação Brasileira de Antropologia Brasil de Barros Laraia, Roque Kinship Studies in Brazil VIBRANT - Vibrant Virtual Brazilian Anthropology, vol. 8, núm. 2, diciembre, 2011, pp. 427 -449 Associação Brasileira de Antropologia Brasília, Brasil Available in: http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=406941912019 How to cite Complete issue Scientific Information System More information about this article Network of Scientific Journals from Latin America, the Caribbean, Spain and Portugal Journal's homepage in redalyc.org Non-profit academic project, developed under the open access initiative Kinship Studies in Brazil* Roque de Barros Laraia “They respect their brothers’ daughters because they consider them as daughters and treat them as such; they do not fornicate with them, as for them real kinship comes through the father, who is the agent. The mothers, compa- red to the fathers, are nothing more than containers in whom the child is bred, and for this reason the fathers’ children, even when mothered by slaves or cap- tive enemies, are always free and as respected as the others. But the children of the females that are the children of captive enemies are kept as slaves or sold; sometimes they kill them and eat them, even if they are their grandchildren, their daughters’ offspring. For the same reason they unashamedly use their daughters’ daughters for copulation, without any obligation or general custom to take them as wives, as is the case with the others, as it is said …” José de Anchieta “Information on marriage among the Indians of Brazil” Modern Brazilian anthropologists are, obviously, aware than kinship is one of the most important aspects of social organisation, notably in so-called sim- ple societies where it is one of the basic principles on which all social life de- pends.
    [Show full text]
  • Brazilian Indigenous People's Struggle for an Intercultural, Specific
    Creative Education, 2016, 7, 13-19 Published Online January 2016 in SciRes. http://www.scirp.org/journal/ce http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ce.2016.71002 Brazilian Indigenous People’s Struggle for an Intercultural, Specific, Differentiated School José Licínio Backes PPGE, UCDB, Campo Grande, Brasil Received 15 September 2015; accepted 11 January 2016; published 14 January 2016 Copyright © 2016 by author and Scientific Research Publishing Inc. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution International License (CC BY). http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Abstract This paper analyzes the Indigenous people’s struggle for an intercultural, specific, differentiated school intended for the valorization of their culture and identity. Aiming to catechize and adapt Indigenous peoples to the western culture, settlers introduced school education as a means to make the Indians give up their identities and integrate them into the national culture. This paper evidences that the Indians have opposed the colonial school right from the start, and by means of struggle and organization, they obtained the right to an intercultural, specific, differentiated Indi- genous school. However, obtaining this right had not put an end to their struggle, as the end of co- lonial school did not mean the end of coloniality. Keywords Indigenous School, Coloniality, Identity 1. Introduction The struggle for a school oriented towards cultural diversity by questioning the school that values the hegemonic culture has characterized the last decades in Brazil. In this struggle, the Indigenous movements have stood out in the construction of an intercultural, specific, differentiated school concerned with both the valorization of their culture and the affirmation of their identities.
    [Show full text]
  • ARAWAK LANGUAGES” by Alexandra Y
    OXFORD BIBLIOGRAPHIES IN LINGUISTICS “ARAWAK LANGUAGES” by Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald © Oxford University Press Not for distribution. For permissions, please email [email protected]. xx Introduction General Overviews Monographs and Dissertations Articles and Book Chapters North Arawak Languages Monographs and Dissertations Articles and Book Chapters Reference Works Grammatical and Lexical Studies Monographs and Dissertations Articles and Book Chapters Specific Issues in the Grammar of North Arawak Languages Mixed Arawak-Carib Language and the Emergence of Island Carib Language Contact and the Effects of Language Obsolescence Dictionaries of North Arawak Languages Pre-andine Arawak Languages Campa Languages Monographs and Dissertations Articles and Book Chapters Amuesha Chamicuro Piro and Iñapari Apurina Arawak Languages of the Xingu Indigenous Park Arawak Languages of Areas near Xingu South Arawak Languages Arawak Languages of Bolivia Introduction The Arawak family is the largest in South America, with about forty extant languages. Arawak languages are spoken in lowland Amazonia and beyond, covering French Guiana, Suriname, Guiana, Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, Brazil, and Bolivia, and formerly in Paraguay and Argentina. Wayuunaiki (or Guajiro), spoken in the region of the Guajiro peninsula in Venezuela and Colombia, is the largest language of the family. Garifuna is the only Arawak language spoken in Belize, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Guatemala in Central America. Groups of Arawak speakers must have migrated from the Caribbean coast to the Antilles a few hundred years before the European conquest. At least several dozen Arawak languages have become extinct since the European conquest. The highest number of recorded Arawak languages is centered in the region between the Rio Negro and the Orinoco.
    [Show full text]
  • The Indigenous World 2014
    IWGIA THE INDIGENOUS WORLD 2014 This yearbook contains a comprehensive update on the cur- rent situation of indigenous peoples and their human rights, THE INDIGENOUS WORLD and provides an overview of the most important developments in international and regional processes during 2013. In 73 articles, indigenous and non-indigenous scholars and activists provide their insight and knowledge to the book with country reports covering most of the indigenous world, and updated information on international and regional processes relating to indigenous peoples. The Indigenous World 2014 is an essential source of informa- tion and indispensable tool for those who need to be informed THE INDIGENOUS WORLD 2014 about the most recent issues and developments that have impacted on indigenous peoples worldwide. 2014 INTERNATIONAL WORK GROUP FOR INDIGENOUS AFFAIRS 3 THE INDIGENOUS WORLD 2014 Copenhagen 2014 THE INDIGENOUS WORLD 2014 Compilation and editing: Cæcilie Mikkelsen Regional editors: Arctic & North America: Kathrin Wessendorf Mexico, Central and South America: Alejandro Parellada Australia and the Pacific: Cæcilie Mikkelsen Asia: Christian Erni and Christina Nilsson The Middle East: Diana Vinding and Cæcilie Mikkelsen Africa: Marianne Wiben Jensen and Geneviève Rose International Processes: Lola García-Alix and Kathrin Wessendorf Cover and typesetting: Jorge Monrás Maps: Jorge Monrás English translation: Elaine Bolton Proof reading: Elaine Bolton Prepress and Print: Eks-Skolens Trykkeri, Copenhagen, Denmark © The authors and The International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs (IWGIA), 2014 - All Rights Reserved HURRIDOCS CIP DATA The reproduction and distribution of information contained Title: The Indigenous World 2014 in The Indigenous World is welcome as long as the source Edited by: Cæcilie Mikkelsen is cited.
    [Show full text]
  • Censo Escolar Indígena – 1999
    Ministério da Educação Secretaria de Educação Fundamental Instituto Nacional de Estudos e Pesquisas Educacionais CENSO ESCOLAR INDÍGENA – 1999 Brasília-DF 2001 1 Coordenação-Geral de Apoio às Escolas Indígenas Esplanada dos Ministérios Bloco L, Edifício-Sede, 7º andar, Sala 721 70047-900 – Brasília-DF Fone: (61) 410-8630/Fax: 410-9274 E-mail: [email protected] Instituto Nacional de Estudos e Pesquisas Educacionais Esplanada dos Ministérios Bloco L, Anexo II, 4° Andar 70047-900 – Brasília-DF http://www.inep.gov.br Dados Internacionais de Catalogação na Publicação (CIP) Instituto Nacional de Estudos e Pesquisas Educacionais (Inep) Brasil. Ministério da Educação. Secretaria de Educação Fundamental. Censo escolar indígena: 1999 / Ministério da Educação, Secretaria de Educação Fundamental. – Brasília: Instituto Nacional de Estudos e Pesquisas Educacionais, 2001. 47 p. : tab. 1. Educação indígena. 2. Censo escolar. I. Instituto Nacional de Estudos e Pesquisas Educacionais. II. Título. CDU 37:39 2 SUMÁRIO Apresentação ............................................................................5 Lista de Tabelas........................................................................7 Introdução .................................................................................9 1 – Dados Gerais ....................................................................13 2 – Estabelecimentos .............................................................15 3 – Professores ......................................................................24 4 – Matrículas
    [Show full text]
  • Espacios De Ocio En La Territorialidad Guaraní Kaiowá De Dourados, Mato Grosso Do Sul, Brasil
    Espacios de ocio en la territorialidad Guaraní Kaiowá de Dourados, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brasil Marina VINHA Universidade Federal da Grande Dourados (UFGD), Brasil. [email protected] Maria Beatriz ROCHA FERREIRA Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Brasil [email protected] Adir CASARO NASCIMENTO Universidade Católica Dom Bosco (UCDB), Brasil [email protected] Recibido: 10-09-2012 Aceptado: 19-12-2012 Resumen En Brasil la población indígena alcanza aproximadamente las 817 mil personas. En el Estado de Mato Grosso do Sul habita una gran parte de ellas: solamente el pueblo Guaraní y sus variedades suponen una población de 47 mil personas distribuidas en 26 aldeas extendidas a lo largo de 18 municipios. Las tierras indígenas forman parte legítima del Estado-nación y están judicialmente vinculadas a los municipios. Junto a este encuadramiento legal, dichas tierras exceden su propio límite espacial, constituyéndose como identidades para cada pueblo. Las tierras y los territorios se transforman en territorialidades, cuyos significados requieren estudios específicos sobre los elementos culturales de cada etnia. Esta investigación se ocupa exclusivamente del municipio de Dourados, en la Reserva Indígena Francisco Horta, y tiene como propósito comprender las figuraciones del ocio o del alevezar (aligerar) por medio de la reflexión sobre la cartografía de sus espacios lúdicos. El estudio aborda las resistencias y los cambios que temporalizan las formas lúdicas en el contexto del patrimonio cultural indígena. Sus objetivos son: (i) aprehender el significado de la territorialidad Guaraní; (ii) identificar los espacios de ocio registrados por los indígenas en los mapas de sus aldeas; (iii) interrelacionar territorialidades y espacios de ocio.
    [Show full text]
  • Biomedical Challenges Presented by the American Indian
    INDEXED BIOMEDICAL CHALLENGES PRESENTED BY THE AMERICAN INDIAN PAN AMERICAN HEALTH ORGANIZATION Pan American Sanitary Bureau, Regional Office of the WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION 1968 iNDEXED BIOMEDICAL CHALLENGES PRESENTED BY THE AMERICAN INDIAN Proceedings of the Special Session held during the Seventh Meeting of the PAHO Advisory Committee on Medical Research 25 June 1968 ,-, ,. Scientific Publication No. 165 September 1968 PAN AMERICAN HEALTH ORGANIZATION Pan American Sanitary Bureau, Regional Office of the WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION 525 Twenty-third Street, N.W. Washington, D.C., 20037 NOTE At each meeting of the Pan American Health Organization Advisory Committee on Medical Research, a special one-day session is held on a topic chosen by the Committee as being of particular interest. At the Seventh Meeting, which convened in June 1968 in Washington, D.C., the session surveyed the origin, present distribution, and principal biological subdivisions of the American Indian and considered the specific scientific and medical issues calling for clarification, including the problems of newly contacted Indian groups and those of groups well along in transition. This volume records the papers presented and the ensuing discussions. '~, t PAHO ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON MEDICAL RESEARCH Dr. Hernán Alessandri Dr. Alberto Hurtado Ex-Decano, Facultad de Medicina Rector, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia Universidad de Chile Lima, Perú Santiago, Chile Dr. Otto G. Bier Dr. Walsh McDermott Diretor, Departamento de Microbiologia e Imu- Chairman, Department of Public Health nologia Cornell University Medical College 4I Escola Paulista de Medicina New York, New York, U.S.A. Sao Paulo, Brasil Dr. Roberto Caldeyro-Barcia Dr. James V. Neel Jefe, Departamento de Fisiopatología Chairman, Department of Human Genetics Facultad de Medicina University of Michigan Medical School Universidad de la República Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S.A.
    [Show full text]
  • Redalyc.DIBUJO E IDENTIDAD INFANTIL ENTRE POBLACIONES
    Ra Ximhai ISSN: 1665-0441 [email protected] Universidad Autónoma Indígena de México México Grubits, Sonia; Peña Ramos, Martha Olivia; Vera Noriega, José Ángel; Lunes Pérez, María Enriqueta; Pérez Gómez, Gerardo Jesús DIBUJO E IDENTIDAD INFANTIL ENTRE POBLACIONES INDÍGENAS MEXICANAS Y DEL CENTRO-OESTE BRASILIEÑO Ra Ximhai, vol. 7, núm. 1, enero-abril, 2011, pp. 51-67 Universidad Autónoma Indígena de México El Fuerte, México Disponible en: http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=46116742006 Cómo citar el artículo Número completo Sistema de Información Científica Más información del artículo Red de Revistas Científicas de América Latina, el Caribe, España y Portugal Página de la revista en redalyc.org Proyecto académico sin fines de lucro, desarrollado bajo la iniciativa de acceso abierto Ra Ximhai Vol. 7, Número 1, enero - abril 2011 DIBUJO E IDENTIDAD INFANTIL ENTRE POBLACIONES INDÍGENAS MEXICANAS Y DEL CENTRO-OESTE BRASILIEÑO INFANTILE DRAWING AND IDENTITY BETWEEN MEXICAN INDIGENOUS POPULATIONS AND CENTER-WEST BRAZILIAN POPULATIONS Sonia Grubits1; Martha Olivia Peña Ramos2; José Ángel Vera Noriega2; María Enriqueta Lunes Pérez2 y Gerardo Jesús Pérez Gómez2 Universidad Católica Don Bosco, Campo Grande-MS, Brasil (UCDB/MS.) correo electónico: [email protected]. Av. Mato Grosso, n. 759, Centro, Campo Grande/MS, Brasil, CP 79002 – 231, Tel./Fax: (55) (67) 3382 36 3121. Centro de Investigación en Alimentación y Desarrollo, A.C., México (CIAD/MX) correo electrónico: [email protected]. Carretera a la Victoria Km0.6, Ejido la Victoria, Hermosillo, 2 México, CP. 8300, Tel. (662) 2892400 , RESUMEN with Mayo community in the north-west Mexico, others were from the south with Tzotsil and Nahualt people.
    [Show full text]
  • PART I: NAME SEQUENCE Name Sequence
    Name Sequence PART I: NAME SEQUENCE A-ch‘ang Abor USE Achang Assigned collective code [sit] Aba (Sino-Tibetan (Other)) USE Chiriguano UF Adi Abaknon Miri Assigned collective code [phi] Miśing (Philippine (Other)) Aborlan Tagbanwa UF Capul USE Tagbanua Inabaknon Abua Kapul Assigned collective code [nic] Sama Abaknon (Niger-Kordofanian (Other)) Abau Abujhmaria Assigned collective code [paa] Assigned collective code [dra] (Papuan (Other)) (Dravidian (Other)) UF Green River Abulas Abaw Assigned collective code [paa] USE Abo (Cameroon) (Papuan (Other)) Abazin UF Ambulas Assigned collective code [cau] Maprik (Caucasian (Other)) Acadian (Louisiana) Abenaki USE Cajun French Assigned collective code [alg] Acateco (Algonquian (Other)) USE Akatek UF Abnaki Achangua Abia Assigned collective code [sai] USE Aneme Wake (South American (Other)) Abidji Achang Assigned collective code [nic] Assigned collective code [sit] (Niger-Kordofanian (Other)) (Sino-Tibetan (Other)) UF Adidji UF A-ch‘ang Ari (Côte d'Ivoire) Atsang Abigar Ache USE Nuer USE Guayaki Abkhaz [abk] Achi Abnaki Assigned collective code [myn] USE Abenaki (Mayan languages) Abo (Cameroon) UF Cubulco Achi Assigned collective code [bnt] Rabinal Achi (Bantu (Other)) Achinese [ace] UF Abaw UF Atjeh Bo Cameroon Acholi Bon (Cameroon) USE Acoli Abo (Sudan) Achuale USE Toposa USE Achuar MARC Code List for Languages October 2007 page 11 Name Sequence Achuar Afar [aar] Assigned collective code [sai] UF Adaiel (South American Indian Danakil (Other)) Afenmai UF Achuale USE Etsako Achuara Jivaro Afghan
    [Show full text]
  • Supporting Information
    Supporting Information Walker et al. 10.1073/pnas.1002598107 Table S1. Database for 128 lowland societies including language family, postmarital residence, paternity beliefs, and data sources Society/language ISO code Language family Postmarital residence Paternity belief Sources Amuesha ame Arawak Uxorilocal Singular 1 Cabiyari cbb Arawak Virilocal 2 Campa cni Arawak Virilocal Singular 3, 4 Curripaco bwi/kpc Arawak Virilocal Weak 4–6 Wayuu guc Arawak Uxorilocal 7, 8 Locono arw Arawak Uxorilocal 4 Machiguenga mcb Arawak Uxorilocal Singular 4, 9 Mehinaku mmh Arawak Ambi-/neolocal Universal 10, 11 Mojo trn Arawak Virilocal 4 Palikur plu Arawak Virilocal Singular 4, 12, ISA website Anu pbg Arawak Ambi-/neolocal 4, 13–15 Paressi pab Arawak Uxorilocal 3, 4 Piro pib Arawak Uxorilocal 16 Taino tnq Arawak Virilocal 4 Terena ter Arawak Ambi-/neolocal 4, 17, ISA website Wapishana wap Arawak Virilocal 4, 18, 19 Yawalapiti yaw Arawak Virilocal 20 Yukuna ycn Arawak Virilocal 4, 21 Apalai apy Carib Uxorilocal 22, ISA website Arara aap Carib Uxorilocal Partible ISA website Bacairi bkq Carib Virilocal 4, 23 Carinya car Carib Ambi-/neolocal 4 Kalapalo kui Carib Ambi-/neolocal Singular 24, 25 Karihona cbd Carib Uxorilocal 26 Kuikuro kui Carib Ambi-/neolocal Weak 27 Macusi mbc Carib Uxorilocal 4, 18, 28 Panare pbh Carib Uxorilocal 4, 29, 30 Taulipang aoc Carib Uxorilocal 4, 31, ISA website Trio tri Carib Uxorilocal Singular 32, 33 Txicao txi Carib Uxorilocal 34 Waica ake Carib Ambi-/neolocal Weak 4, 35 Waimiri-Atroari atr Carib Uxorilocal Partible 36 Waiwai
    [Show full text]
  • BMJ Open Is Committed to Open Peer Review. As Part of This Commitment We Make the Peer Review History of Every Article We Publish Publicly Available
    BMJ Open: first published as 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-037922 on 27 October 2020. Downloaded from BMJ Open is committed to open peer review. As part of this commitment we make the peer review history of every article we publish publicly available. When an article is published we post the peer reviewers’ comments and the authors’ responses online. We also post the versions of the paper that were used during peer review. These are the versions that the peer review comments apply to. The versions of the paper that follow are the versions that were submitted during the peer review process. They are not the versions of record or the final published versions. They should not be cited or distributed as the published version of this manuscript. BMJ Open is an open access journal and the full, final, typeset and author-corrected version of record of the manuscript is available on our site with no access controls, subscription charges or pay-per-view fees (http://bmjopen.bmj.com). If you have any questions on BMJ Open’s open peer review process please email [email protected] http://bmjopen.bmj.com/ on September 25, 2021 by guest. Protected copyright. BMJ Open BMJ Open: first published as 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-037922 on 27 October 2020. Downloaded from The influence of traditional midwifery and other factors on maternal health in Indigenous communities in the Americas: protocol for a scoping review ForJournal: peerBMJ Open review only Manuscript ID bmjopen-2020-037922 Article Type: Protocol Date Submitted by the 21-Feb-2020 Author: Complete List of
    [Show full text]
  • Rondon, Myth, Ideology and Petty Domination
    Allegories Of Wildness ~ Refractions Of Wildness: The Choreography Of War Peoples with histories[i] To best understand the situation with the Latundê, it is essential to have as much historical understanding as possible to comprehend the basis of the present and to more clearly see these people as but one thread in the myriad of local groups and peoples that comprise the Nambikwara fabric. The documentary history of the Latundê showed the contingencies that amounted to a tragic destiny. The field research discussed afterwards demonstrated that the destiny and viability of their social group, ethnic identity, and language is unclear. For the small group of people now called Latundê, we have can only get a fleeting glimpse of their history and only of a short amount of time. This is in part because of communication difficulties, but owes also to the Indians’ reticence to discuss the past. It is quite obvious that they parted ways with the main body of the Northern Nambikwara not too long ago. Linguistically, the Lakondê dialect is very similar, aside from a number of syntactic and lexical differences. The major leader of the latter group, the one who was responsible for contact, and who is the brother of Dona Tereza, claimed that the two languages were the same. Therefore the small group of Latundê must have participated in the northern network described for the history of the Sabanê. As to the Sabanê, they were documented to be in the Roosevelt/Tenente Marques area at the time of Rondon’s incursion and initial expropriation. Additionally, they have stories about prior migrations.
    [Show full text]