Honor the Earth: Circle Of Resistance Map: South America: Brazil: Indigenous Language, Lifeways, and Land

 

Socioambiental
Brazil

Instituto Socioambiental (ISA) is an organization established to propose solutions for environmental and social issues. ISA's main objective is to defend the social good and rights, both collective and diffuse, relating to the environment, cultural heritage, human rights and the peoples.

For more information:

To email Socioambiental, click here

To see the latest news, click here

Amazon Conservation Team
Arlington, Virginia

The Amazon Conservation Team works in partnership with indigenous people conserving biodiversity, health and culture in tropical America. The Brazil Program of the Amazon Conservation Team became full-fledged in 1999 with two efforts: the successful protection of the Uwasu Rainforest Reserve, and the initiation of an biocultural mapping project for Kamayurá indigenous ancestral lands in the Xingu National Indigenous Reserve upon the direct invitation of the tribe. Since then, the Brazil Program has grown to encompass a variety of conservation projects, and they now have offices in Manaus, Macapá, and Canarana in addition to their main administrative office in Brasilia.

For more information:

Amazon Conservation Team
4211 N. Fairfax Dr.
Arlington, VA 22203
P: 703-522-4684
F: 703-522-4464
info@amazonteam.org

Amazon Watch
San Francisco, CA

Amazon Watch's mission is to work with indigenous and environmental organizations in the Amazon Basin to defend the environment and advance indigenous peoples' rights in the face of large-scale industrial development-oil and gas pipelines, power lines, roads, and other mega-projects. Brazil´s remote Amazon heartlands are currently threatened by intensive industrial development plans that include the creation of industrial waterways to transport natural resources and massive gas and hydroelectric development projects to meet Brazil´s energy demands. Amazon Watch is monitoring industrial mega-projects in the Brazilian Amazon paying particular attention to the Urucu Gas Pipeline Project, the Belo Monte Dam and the Tocantins-Araguaia Waterway, which threaten indigenous lands and forest communities with many damaging social and environmental impacts.

For more information:

1 Haight St. Suite B
San Francisco, CA 94102
P: 415-487-9600
F: 415-487-9601
amazon@amazonwatch.org


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