Organizações indígenas e as estratégias para a gestão do território - uma análise a partir do consórcio dos produtores
Carregando...
Arquivos
Data
Autores
Título da Revista
ISSN da Revista
Título de Volume
Editor
Universidade do Estado do Amazonas
Resumo
In the present study, we reflected on the organization of the Sateré-Mawé people around the
sale of products derived from the biodiversity of the Andirá-Marau Indigenous Land, which
are intrinsically linked to the culture of that people. According to the National Indian
Foundation - FUNAI (2018), the Consortium of Sateré-Mawé Producers (CPSM), includes
450 registered indigenous producers and 306 suitable for the commercialization of guaraná,
being responsible for the regulation and assistance of cultivation, management and
commercialization of production, in addition to financing the autonomous administration of
the Indigenous Territory. The consortium is considered by the indigenous leaders as the
“economic arm of the Sateré-Mawé nation”, being articulated and organized in the General
Council of the Sateré-Mawé Tribe. The research had as objective to analyze the creation of
the Consortium, as well as to know the products of the nature commercialized by the natives
and, still, the contextualization of the warana, that has cultural value for the referred people.
The research methodology consisted of a qualitative approach, due to its relevance to the
studies of social relations and the pluralization of the spheres of life that makes it possible to
directly analyze the individual, the group or an institution. Among the research findings, we
highlight a type of commercialization with a purpose different from the capitalist mode of
production, because according to the reports of the Sateré-Mawé leaders, the products offered
for sale represent cultural and identity resistance, being a strategic way of placing imbued
products on the market. of cultural value that mobilize actions around policies to protect the
territory, preserve biodiversity, generating a cultural economy for the well-being of the
indigenous people.