Indigenous rights in Brazil
Good principles, bleak reality
In practice, a different picture
There is however a gap between what is stated in the law and what is happening on the ground.Although the most important indigenous lands are legally demarcated today, the government has not provided the needed money for education and health care. For this reason, indigenous people such as the Yanomami have high rates of children mortality.
Ongoing persecution
Some indigenous groups continue to face persecution in various forms. Poor migrant populations that are relocating from overpopulated areas to begin subsistence farming or in search of gold may infringe on indigenous territory, or compete for the same resources.The expansion of the Trans-Amazonian highway and other development projects are creating a range of problems, which indigenous people face great difficulties to deal with.
1 Brooke, 1993 in Kricher, 1997
