Brazil: reaching out, holding hands
The President of the Association of Indigenous Communities of the Middle Negro River (ACIMRN), Sandra Gomes, speaks about the challenges indigenous communities face due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Negro River in the Amazon region is the largest black water river in the world. Its basin area of approximately 750,000 sq. km accounts for seven percent of the total area of the Amazon basin, and its length from pre-Andean Colombia to its mouth, is approximately 1,700 km, making it the Amazon’s largest tributary.
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Main Authors: | França, Lorena, Silva, Luclécia Cristina Morais da, Ferreira, Beatriz Mesquita Pedrosa |
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Format: | article biblioteca |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2020
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Subjects: | Fisheries, ICSF, Yemaya, women in fisheries, small scale fisheries, gender, livelihoods, impact, fishing communities, Brazil, food security, COVID, poverty, Amazon, Indigenous communities, |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/1834/41341 |
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