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  • The demands of indigenous peoples for international protection of their rights were finally met when, on 13 September 2007 in N ...of their relations with nation states and sets minimum standards for other international instruments and national laws. The Declaration embodies principles such as
    5 KB (781 words) - 18:04, 14 August 2018
  • ...nisms that allow them to deal with the institutional world of national and international society. They also allow them to coordinate territorial demands (<htmltag h
    2 KB (219 words) - 16:55, 23 August 2018
  • ...relations that are both fairer and more dignified with local, national and international societies has reached a new dimension.
    2 KB (299 words) - 17:16, 6 February 2018
  • The agenda pursued by national and international society for Brazil’s ‘Indians’ in the early 1990s encouraged the emer ...nt of President Fernando Henrique Cardoso set off an enormous national and international polemic with the announcement of a new decree establishing rules for the de
    11 KB (1,702 words) - 16:14, 6 February 2018
  • ...group of the Jamamadi, but their language is different, which led the SIL (International Linguistics Society, formerly Summer Institute of Linguistics) to send a mi ...ON, R. M. W. (1995), “Fusional Development of gender marking in Jarawara”, International Journal of American Linguistics, 61, p. 263-294.</li>
    11 KB (1,640 words) - 16:59, 26 March 2018
  • ...s other organs Funai deemed convenient. If the lands were located along an international border, the presence of a representative of the secretary-general of the Na ...eneral of the National Security Council in the case of lands located along international borders. But, in fact, the secretary of the National Security Council decid
    17 KB (2,444 words) - 16:14, 20 September 2018
  • ...tion of various macro sociopolitical processes interacting at national and international level. Within Brazil we can firstly identify the promulgation of the 1988 C ...92 in Rio de Janeiro. A second decisive factor was the decentralization of international cooperation, which today includes sections of organized civil society in su
    33 KB (4,897 words) - 16:10, 6 February 2018
  • ...nous population; often there are cases of peoples who live on two sides of international borders, which were created long after they were established in the region; ...ountry and also of international organisms such as the United Nations, the International Labor Organization or the Organization of American States.
    40 KB (6,193 words) - 14:44, 16 February 2018
  • <li>FERNANDES, José Loureiro. A dying people. Bulletin of the International Commitee on Urgent Anthropological Research, s.l., n.2, 1959.</li> Publicado também no Bulletin of the International Commitee on Urgent Anthropological Research, Vienna, n.5, p. 151-4, 1962
    21 KB (3,340 words) - 17:27, 26 March 2018
  • ...n unbroken platform gently dropping from 300 metres above sea-level at the international boundaries to just above 100 metres at the boundary with the state of Amazo ...ance for their indigenous and regional populations, and where national and international interests converge. These federal areas are made up by a National park, thr
    24 KB (3,997 words) - 17:14, 26 March 2018
  • ...access to the Atlantic Ocean via the Amazon River, which had been open to international navigation since 1873. ....). Ethnobiology : implications and applications. Proceedings of the First International Congress of Ethnobiology (Belem, 1988). v.2. Belém : MPEG, 1990. p.125-30.
    31 KB (4,903 words) - 17:12, 26 March 2018
  • ...te groupes in the north-western Amazon. Estocolmo : Almquist &amp; Wiksell International, 1981. (Uppsala Studies in Cultural Anthropology, 4) ...can kinship : eight kinship systems from Brazil and Colombia. Dallas : The International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 55-70.</li>
    25 KB (3,848 words) - 17:20, 26 March 2018
  • .... They are part of the near 7,000 languages spoken today in the world (SIL International, 2009). Before the arrival of the Portuguese, however, only in Brazil that
    21 KB (3,278 words) - 15:19, 23 October 2019
  • ...o held, until not so long ago, a position of leadership in the Linguistics international scene (it has money for publishing and publishes in English). ...works focusing Indigenous languages in scientific events in Brazil; in the international events, SIL’s missionary/linguists have not dominated the scene for a whi
    31 KB (4,893 words) - 16:02, 6 February 2018
  • ...onale : les Yanomami face au projet Calha Norte. Ethnies, Paris : Survival International, n.11/12, p.116-27, 1990. --------. Homologation des terres Yanomami. Ethnies, Paris : Survival International, v. 17, n. 29/30, p. 80-1, 2003.
    61 KB (9,337 words) - 15:20, 20 August 2018
  • ...The Indigenous Missionary Council, other concerned NGOs, such as Survival International-UK, and concerned individuals, have taken the issue of illegal invasions of ...ems facing the Ka'apor people at the end of the 20th century (Balée, Texas International Law Journal, 1997).
    40 KB (6,288 words) - 17:00, 26 March 2018
  • ...ultural change. Dallas : International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 71-8. (International Museum of Cultures Publication, 19)</li> ...can kinship : eight kinship systems from Brazil and Colombia. Dallas : The International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 93-112.</li>
    39 KB (6,177 words) - 17:16, 26 March 2018
  • ...here is a grammar published by the Summer School of Linguistics (today the International Society of Linguistics), a missionary-run institute with many linguistic re <li>--------. Urgent research in Northwest Mato Grosso. Bulletin of the International Commitee on Urgent Anthropological and Ethnological Research, Viena, n. 8,
    42 KB (6,749 words) - 17:00, 26 March 2018
  • ...igious and Social Rituals and the Use of Psychoactive Plants), part of the international seminar "O Uso e o Abuso de Drogas" (Drug Use and Abuse), held at the Unive
    18 KB (2,985 words) - 16:51, 26 March 2018
  • ...were approximately 500 on the Peruvian side in 1998, according to the SIL (International Linguistics Society, formerly Summer Institute of Linguistics). ...ti : um cordofone de ressoador craniano Arauak. Apresentado do Congress of International Council for Traditional Musica (36º.: 2001: Rio de Janeiro).
    39 KB (6,361 words) - 17:09, 26 March 2018
  • Babaçu, which was sold for less and was less affected by fluctuations in the international market, unlike rubber and castanha, never came to involve all of the popula ...-----"Lexical categories and the status of Descriptives in Apinajé (Jê)\". International Journal of American Linguistics no. 69, v.3: 243-271. 2003.</li>
    40 KB (6,386 words) - 16:48, 26 March 2018
  • ...ssionaries of the Summer Institute of Linguistics (SIL, today known as the International Linguistics Society), Arno and Joyce Abrahamson came to the region, accompa
    20 KB (3,132 words) - 17:00, 26 March 2018
  • ...Leonard.  Stress placement, syllable structure, and minimality in Banawa.  International Journal of Amer.  Linguistics, Chicago : Univ. of Chicago Press, v. 59, n.
    20 KB (3,311 words) - 16:51, 26 March 2018
  • ...se to the so-called rubber boom, which launched the Amazon region into the international capitalist market. This fact accelerated the process of non-indigenous occu ...first teachers was initiated in the mid-1970s, with support from the SIL (International Linguistics society) and the Mission of São Francisco.
    44 KB (6,991 words) - 17:12, 26 March 2018
  • ...ndigenous and Tribal Peoples in Independent Countries,” established by the International Labour Organization (ILO) in 1989, had important consequences for the socia
    23 KB (3,482 words) - 16:27, 29 January 2018
  • ...the Grande Carajás Programme on the indians of Brazil.  Londres : Survival International, 1987.</li>
    21 KB (3,332 words) - 16:56, 26 March 2018
  • --------.  Textes Galibi.  In: CONTES amérindiens de Guyane.  Paris : Conseil International de la Langue Française, 1987.  p.8-67.
    23 KB (3,750 words) - 16:55, 26 March 2018
  • ...raphy of the Karaja indians of Central Brazil. Virginia : Univ. Microfilms International, 1982. 348 p. (Tese de Doutorado)</li> ....). Ethnobiology : implications and applications. Proceedings of the First International Congress of Ethnobiology (Belem, 1988). v.1. Belém : MPEG, 1990. p. 89-98.
    42 KB (6,768 words) - 17:03, 26 March 2018
  • ...nale : les Yanomami face au projet Calha Norte.  Ethnies, Paris : Survival International, n.11/12, p.116-27, 1990.</li> ...wana de la cuenca de rio Caura, Guayana Venezuelana.  Georgetown : Iokrama International Centre for Rain Forest Conservation and Development, 2000.  Texto apresent
    44 KB (7,197 words) - 17:29, 26 March 2018
  • ...ups - such as the Human Rights Commission of the United Nations or Amnesty International - to which indigenous leaders have been resorting to make denunciations aga
    48 KB (7,704 words) - 17:23, 26 March 2018
  • ...raphy of the Karaja indians of Central Brazil. Virginia : Univ. Microfilms International, 1982. 348 p. (Tese de Doutorado)</li> ....). Ethnobiology : implications and applications. Proceedings of the First International Congress of Ethnobiology (Belem, 1988). v.1. Belém : MPEG, 1990. p. 89-98.
    41 KB (6,453 words) - 17:47, 2 April 2018
  • ...of Karitiana grammar’), and has published various articles in national and international journals. ...of mass circulation, as well as a large number of articles, almost all in international journals, which discuss Karitiana genetics and molecular biology. The latte
    67 KB (10,625 words) - 15:09, 1 April 2021
  • During the 1980s and 1990s, the Kayapó became famous in the national and international media as a result of their activism in pursuit of political rights and the ...ural affinity with the forest. The impression remains that many sources of international help were only interested in the Indians in so far as they acted as defende
    112 KB (17,626 words) - 17:22, 13 July 2018
  • ...t: The inclusion of the Jabuti language family in the Macro-Jê stock”. In: International Journal of American Linguistics.</li>
    25 KB (3,985 words) - 16:50, 26 March 2018
  • ...uction workers. The government was also in a hurry because of national and international protests against its plans to build the highway straight through the middle <li>THE TRAUMA of contact. Survival: Newsletter, Londres : Survival International, n. 29, p. 8-9, 1991.</li>
    44 KB (7,058 words) - 17:24, 26 March 2018
  • ...on along its course in Brazil. During the rainy season the voyage from the international border to the confluence with the Juruá, located in the municipality of Ma ...uffered a steady decline with the crisis provoked by falling prices on the international market. The raiding expeditions institutionalized by the patrões caucheiro
    94 KB (15,081 words) - 16:50, 26 March 2018
  • ...t: The inclusion of the Jabuti language family in the Macro-Jê stock”. In: International Journal of American Linguistics.</li>
    26 KB (4,105 words) - 16:54, 26 March 2018
  • <li>-------. Discourse redundancy in Hixkaryana. International journal of american linguistics 43: 176-1 88, 1977.</li> ...feather adornments. In: Mary H. Preuss (ed.): Selected papers from the VLL International Symposium On Latin American Indian Literatures. Culver City, Calif.: Labyri
    60 KB (9,472 words) - 17:25, 26 March 2018
  • ...was a large natural reserve of rubber trees. However, with the collapse in international rubber prices at the start of the 20th century, the rubber bosses began to
    24 KB (3,800 words) - 17:07, 26 March 2018
  • ....: Carlos Pasini. Vídeo cor, VHS, 52 min., 1991. Prod.: Granada Television International</li>
    27 KB (4,588 words) - 17:11, 26 March 2018
  • ...ogic data about the Xokleng has helped to broadcast their existence at the international milieu. The physician Simoens Da Silva was among the Xokleng in 1930 and wr
    50 KB (8,052 words) - 17:27, 26 March 2018
  • ...the distant whites, beginning with the Funai and ending with national and international NGOs, which allowed them ample autonomy from the local patrons. In a certai
    26 KB (4,277 words) - 17:28, 26 March 2018
  • ...te groupes in the north-western Amazon. Estocolmo : Almquist &amp; Wiksell International, 1981. (Uppsala Studies in Cultural Anthropology, 4) ...can kinship : eight kinship systems from Brazil and Colombia. Dallas : The International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 55-70.</li>
    63 KB (10,034 words) - 17:24, 26 March 2018
  • ...ularities of Xikrin speech. The Kayapó have an orthography designed by the International Society of Linguistics (SIL), a missionary body that has worked for decades <li>Ritual music of the Kayapó-Xikrin, Brazil. International Institute for Traditional Music/Smithsonian Folkways, 1995 (Traditional Mus
    53 KB (8,613 words) - 17:06, 26 March 2018
  • ...harvest and marketing of rain forest products.  Washington : Conservation International, Island Press, 1992.  p. 27-40.</li>
    28 KB (4,376 words) - 17:25, 26 March 2018
  • ...ão and the Zoró Indians of Brazil. Institute of Social Anthropology, Oslo. International Peace Research Institute, Oslo.</li>
    37 KB (5,970 words) - 16:58, 26 March 2018
  • ...tail by the American missionaries Barbara and Robert Campbell, of the SIL (International Linguistics Society, formerly the Summer Institute of Linguistics), who hav
    30 KB (4,915 words) - 16:58, 26 March 2018
  • ...genous populations and the regional populations, and of great national and international interest. Among the lands belonging to the federal government which exist i
    36 KB (6,090 words) - 16:49, 26 March 2018
  • ...estern border of Xerente territory. These projects are mostly supported by international capital (particularly from the Japanese), which is interested in the produc
    33 KB (5,179 words) - 17:27, 26 March 2018
  • ...ations, since the government had both haste and money, a result of massive international loans. The newly created Funai, composed of military men in their higher ec ...d-1980’s and advancing both north and south. Rising mahogany prices in the international market made the exploration of previously inaccessible areas viable and dic
    73 KB (11,888 words) - 17:15, 26 March 2018
  • ...alternatives. To do that, they have sought to articulate with national and international indigenous organizations, but they have been more than aware of their lack ...can kinship : eight kinship systems from Brazil and Colombia. Dallas : The International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 5-34.</li>
    83 KB (13,614 words) - 17:19, 26 March 2018
  • ...te groupes in the north-western Amazon. Estocolmo : Almquist &amp; Wiksell International, 1981. (Uppsala Studies in Cultural Anthropology, 4) ...can kinship : eight kinship systems from Brazil and Colombia. Dallas : The International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 55-70.</li>
    97 KB (15,919 words) - 17:08, 26 March 2018
  • ...te groupes in the north-western Amazon. Estocolmo : Almquist &amp; Wiksell International, 1981. (Uppsala Studies in Cultural Anthropology, 4) ...can kinship : eight kinship systems from Brazil and Colombia. Dallas : The International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 55-70.</li>
    97 KB (15,926 words) - 16:52, 26 March 2018
  • ...te groupes in the north-western Amazon. Estocolmo : Almquist &amp; Wiksell International, 1981. (Uppsala Studies in Cultural Anthropology, 4) ...can kinship : eight kinship systems from Brazil and Colombia. Dallas : The International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 55-70.</li>
    97 KB (15,935 words) - 17:03, 26 March 2018
  • ...te groupes in the north-western Amazon. Estocolmo : Almquist &amp; Wiksell International, 1981. (Uppsala Studies in Cultural Anthropology, 4) ...can kinship : eight kinship systems from Brazil and Colombia. Dallas : The International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 55-70.</li>
    97 KB (15,934 words) - 17:10, 26 March 2018
  • ...te groupes in the north-western Amazon. Estocolmo : Almquist &amp; Wiksell International, 1981. (Uppsala Studies in Cultural Anthropology, 4) ...can kinship : eight kinship systems from Brazil and Colombia. Dallas : The International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 55-70.</li>
    97 KB (15,934 words) - 16:54, 26 March 2018
  • ...te groupes in the north-western Amazon. Estocolmo : Almquist &amp; Wiksell International, 1981. (Uppsala Studies in Cultural Anthropology, 4) ...can kinship : eight kinship systems from Brazil and Colombia. Dallas : The International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 55-70.</li>
    98 KB (15,976 words) - 17:17, 26 March 2018
  • ...te groupes in the north-western Amazon. Estocolmo : Almquist &amp; Wiksell International, 1981. (Uppsala Studies in Cultural Anthropology, 4) ...can kinship : eight kinship systems from Brazil and Colombia. Dallas : The International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 55-70.</li>
    97 KB (15,944 words) - 17:07, 26 March 2018
  • ...te groupes in the north-western Amazon. Estocolmo : Almquist &amp; Wiksell International, 1981. (Uppsala Studies in Cultural Anthropology, 4) ...can kinship : eight kinship systems from Brazil and Colombia. Dallas : The International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 55-70.</li>
    97 KB (15,946 words) - 17:19, 26 March 2018
  • ...te groupes in the north-western Amazon. Estocolmo : Almquist &amp; Wiksell International, 1981. (Uppsala Studies in Cultural Anthropology, 4) ...can kinship : eight kinship systems from Brazil and Colombia. Dallas : The International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 55-70.</li>
    97 KB (15,946 words) - 17:12, 26 March 2018
  • ...te groupes in the north-western Amazon. Estocolmo : Almquist &amp; Wiksell International, 1981. (Uppsala Studies in Cultural Anthropology, 4) ...can kinship : eight kinship systems from Brazil and Colombia. Dallas : The International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 55-70.</li>
    96 KB (15,713 words) - 16:52, 26 March 2018
  • ...te groupes in the north-western Amazon. Estocolmo : Almquist &amp; Wiksell International, 1981. (Uppsala Studies in Cultural Anthropology, 4) ...can kinship : eight kinship systems from Brazil and Colombia. Dallas : The International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 55-70.</li>
    98 KB (16,009 words) - 17:22, 26 March 2018
  • ...te groupes in the north-western Amazon. Estocolmo : Almquist &amp; Wiksell International, 1981. (Uppsala Studies in Cultural Anthropology, 4)</li> ...can kinship : eight kinship systems from Brazil and Colombia. Dallas : The International Museum of Cultures, 1985. p. 55-70.</li>
    98 KB (15,973 words) - 16:48, 26 March 2018
  • ...hich were resolved by treaty in 1909. A fall in the price of rubber on the international market in 1912 also contributed to cessation of the correrias. Although ove
    44 KB (7,299 words) - 17:05, 26 March 2018
  • ...ich led to the elaboration of a report and the launching of a national and international campaign for the reunification of the Maxakalí areas. This finally happene
    46 KB (7,384 words) - 17:11, 26 March 2018
  • ...ere undertaken by the associations through FOIRN with the support of NGOs, international funding bodies and the Brazilian state.
    46 KB (7,373 words) - 17:29, 26 March 2018
  • The document led to a national and international campaign in favour of demarcating an area of protection for the region's In
    52 KB (8,476 words) - 17:11, 26 March 2018
  • ....  Résistance Gavião : d'une frontiere l'autre.  Ethnies, Paris : Survival International, n. 11/12, p. 81-6, 1990.
    46 KB (7,486 words) - 16:56, 26 March 2018
  • ...V, to which the Kayabi language also belongs. Velda Nicholson, of the SIL (International Linguistics Society, formerly Summer Institute of Linguistics), has studied
    47 KB (7,777 words) - 16:50, 26 March 2018
  • ...d by the majority of young people from the area. Occupying a region on the international border, many people also speak Spanish well. To give an example of this mul
    55 KB (9,014 words) - 17:25, 26 March 2018
  • ...demarcating and computerizing the borders, facilitated by the natural and international frontiers followed in the proposal for the ‘continuous area,’ informing
    47 KB (7,300 words) - 17:09, 26 March 2018
  • <li>-------. Discourse redundancy in Hixkaryana. International journal of american linguistics 43: 176-1 88, 1977.</li>
    61 KB (10,002 words) - 16:57, 26 March 2018
  • <li>SHELL, Olive. Gramatical outline of Kraho, Gê family. International Journal of American Linguistics, Bloomington : s.ed., v. 18, n. 3, 1952.</l
    48 KB (7,848 words) - 17:07, 26 March 2018
  • ...o. The Second World War led to an increase in the demand for rubber on the international market, stimulating the migration of thousands of impoverished men from the
    57 KB (9,167 words) - 17:12, 26 March 2018
  • ...o. The Second World War led to an increase in the demand for rubber on the international market, stimulating the migration of thousands of impoverished men from the
    58 KB (9,249 words) - 16:58, 26 March 2018
  • ...RVIVAL INTERNATIONAL. Deserdados : os índios do Brasil. Londres : Survival International, 2000. 96 p.</li>
    92 KB (14,485 words) - 16:57, 26 March 2018
  • From 1962 on, missionaries of the SIL (International Linguistics Society) began living with the Indians and remained there until ...lled the Summer Institute of Linguistics (SIL, today it is also called the International Linguistics Society). Along with their proselytizing activities, and educat
    111 KB (17,905 words) - 17:26, 26 March 2018
  • From 1962 on, missionaries of the SIL (International Linguistics Society) began living with the Indians and remained there until ...lled the Summer Institute of Linguistics (SIL, today it is also called the International Linguistics Society). Along with their proselytizing activities, and educat
    114 KB (18,246 words) - 16:47, 26 March 2018
  • ...ion and its role in the rise of the state. British Archaeological Reports: International Series, n. 349, p 245-60, 1987.</li> ...s. In: WALLACE, A. F. C. (Org.). Men and cultures : selected papers of 5th International Congress of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences, 1960.</li>
    121 KB (19,695 words) - 17:27, 26 March 2018
  • ...ités structurales des langues Chibcha et Nambikwara”. Actes du 28e Congrès International des Américanistes, Paris. 1948, 185-192.</li>
    65 KB (10,345 words) - 17:18, 26 March 2018
  • International Congress of Americanistes. New York: [s.n.?], Session 23, 1930. 4 p. Separa
    66 KB (10,573 words) - 16:57, 26 March 2018
  • ...RVIVAL INTERNATIONAL. Deserdados : os índios do Brasil. Londres : Survival International, 2000. 96 p.</li>
    122 KB (19,474 words) - 16:57, 26 March 2018
  • ...RVIVAL INTERNATIONAL. Deserdados : os índios do Brasil. Londres : Survival International, 2000. 96 p.</li>
    122 KB (19,513 words) - 16:56, 26 March 2018
  • ...f situated in the far southwest of Brazilian Amazonia. The state possesses international borders with Peru and Bolivia, and national borders with the states of Amaz
    71 KB (11,676 words) - 17:13, 26 March 2018
  • ..., le chapeau cérémoniel Palikur. Catálogo da Exposição “Índios no Brasil”. International Arts Festival Europália, Bruxelas, 2011.</li>
    69 KB (10,897 words) - 17:14, 26 March 2018
  • ...nté passe par la bouche, mais les dieux n'ont pas de chair”. 46ème Congrès International d'Américanistes, Amsterdam, 4-7 julho 1988.
    70 KB (10,830 words) - 17:29, 26 March 2018
  • ...t by chance, the masks, designs and paintings of this people have achieved international recognition.
    84 KB (13,519 words) - 17:21, 26 March 2018
  • ...these crimes was widely publicized and had great impact, including in the international press, the so-called “Massacre at Parallel 11”, which resulted in denun
    87 KB (14,824 words) - 16:53, 26 March 2018