Indigenous Land Rights Win in Brazil Court
Indigenous Land Rights Win in Brazil Court
In a world becoming “unhinged” by our collective inability to unite and meet such existential challenges as AI, intractable geopolitical conflicts and climate instability, the Supreme Federal Court of Brazil handed down a rare and important victory for Indigenous land rights, and, indeed, for people everywhere.Last Thursday, Indigenous people who traveled from across Brazil to await the decision burst into tears of joy as the decisive vote was cast. The suit, which had been brought by Santa Caterina, a Brazilian state, and was backed by tobacco farmers and the country's large agribusiness industry, sought to block the Xokleng people, an Indigenous group, from claiming a larger portion of territory as their own.At the heart of the case is a Brazilian legal theory called marco temporal, or “time marker,” also called the “time limit trick.” According to Brazil's Constitution, original territorial rights of Indigenous people are to be honored. However, in 2007, opponents of Indigenous land rights set October 5th, 1988, the day that the current Constitution was signed, as the day that those groups must have been physically occupying the land they claim as territory, or at least have been legally fighting for the right to occupy the land in question. If they weren't, according to marco temporal, they have no claim.Prior to the ratification of the current Constitution, however, Brazil had been subject to over twenty years of military rule, following a 1964 coup that deposed a democratically elected leftist government headed by President Joao Goulart. The US-backed coup installed a repressive regime which suspended habeas corpus for political offenses, ramped up censorship, disbanded Congress, tortured and killed dissenters, but at least it was less friendly to communism and one must have a sense of priorities. It was also less friendly to Indigenous land rights, and during the years that the junta was in power, Brazil's Indigenous population experienced forced expulsion from their traditional territories.
Serra do Rio do Rastro in Santa Catarina, Brazil. Photo by Marinelson Almeida, via Flickr. CC BY 2.0.
Sources:
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About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.