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Runa

On-line version ISSN 1851-9628

Abstract

VANDER VELDEN, Felipe. About failures and relative successes. Runa [online]. 2021, vol.42, n.1, pp.391-407.  Epub Apr 21, 2021. ISSN 1851-9628.  http://dx.doi.org/10.34096/runa.v42i1.8287.

This article discusses from a concrete ethnographic example of a failed chicken husbandry project, collected among the Karitiana (Tupi-Arikém indigenous people in the state of Rondônia, southwestern Brazilian Amazon), some of the reasons why the introduction of large-scale animal husbandry in the Lowland South American societies have failed, or, at most, achieved relative successes,. Built as an important part of public policies officially directed at indigenous peoples since at least the beginning of the 20th century, animal husbandry is based on a series of assumptions incompatible with Amerindian forms of relationship with non-human beings. Such imbalances explain the failure of the multiple attempts to implement livestock, fish farming or poultry farming (among others) in Amazonian indigenous villages, suggesting that such activities do not seem to be good alternatives for economic sustainability of these populations.

Keywords : Animal husbandry; Projects; Indigenous Peoples; Amazonia; Ethnology.

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