Navegando por Assunto "Genocide"
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Item Acesso aberto (Open Access) Nas fronteiras dos impactos expansionistas do capital sobre a saúde dos povos indígenas no brasil: questões para a compreensão do suicídio(Associação Brasileira da Rede UNIDA, 2019) ADSUARA, Carmen Hannud Carballeda; ARAÚJO, Gabriel Henrique Macedo de; OLIVEIRA, Paulo de Tarso Ribeiro deSuicide among indigenous peoples in Brazil occupies a prominent place in the concern of several leaderships, indigenists and intellectuals. However, often the look at this phenomenon becomes detached from the social fabric that permeates the relationship between indigenous and nonindigenous society. Thus, the present article proposes to look at the available literature on suicide, based on the central assumption that it is inseparable from the contradictory process of violence and embezzlement to which they have been subjected despite the guarantee of their rights under international agreements. Thus, considering the structurehistory movement of cultures, the text addresses suicide as a collective health problem for the population and indigenous peoples in an inseparable way from the history of genocide in the context of borders, so there is a epistemic transformation caused by the penetration of territories.Item Acesso aberto (Open Access) Necroterritórios: Territorialização e desterritorialização dos povos indígenas como estratégias necropolíticas(Universidade Federal do Pará, 2021-06) OLIVEIRA, Manoel Rufino David deThis study aims to analyze the territory as a necropolitical technology for the production of death of indigenous peoples, based on the theory of Achille Mbembe and Rogério Haesbaert. Firstly, we discussed the concept of necropolitics, and then we explained the historic process of genocide of indigenous peoples. Third, we analyzed the territory as a necropolitical technology for the production of death of these peoples, mainly based on practices of territorialization and deterritorialization. The research is exploratory and adopts the deductive method, using bibliographic and documentary review as research tools. In the end, we concluded that the territories in the Cerrado and in the Amazon are truly necroterritories, in which processes of territorialization and deterritorialization capture the lives of indigenous peoples and produce their mass extermination in response to the needs of agribusiness capital.