Escola Nacional de Saúde Pública, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
PLoS One. 2022 Feb 25;17(2):e0264525. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0264525. eCollection 2022.
Following boom-and-bust economic cycles provoked by Brazilian governmental attempts to integrate Indigenous peoples into national society, it is approximately since the beginning of the 2000s that Brazilian Indigenous peoples came to be viewed officially as "poor" and victims of "hunger." Consequently, the national indigenist agency and other State entities started to conceive and implement diverse initiatives that ultimately injected money and resources into Indigenous communities. In 2019 we undertook an ethnographic study in three A'uwẽ (Xavante) communities in the Pimentel Barbosa Indigenous Reserve, Central Brazil, with the objective of analyzing how people understand and pursue food security. We propose that in the studied communities the complex network of A'uwẽ food reciprocity is a fundamental strategy for mitigating hunger and acute lack of food. We show that among the A'uwẽ, the hybrid economy that developed since the 1970s has proved resilient to dramatic transformations and uncertainty in the availability and characteristics of external government inputs.
在巴西政府试图将土著人民融入国家社会所引发的繁荣与萧条的经济周期之后,大约从 21 世纪初开始,巴西土著人民开始被官方视为“贫困”和“饥饿”的受害者。因此,国家土著机构和其他国家实体开始构想和实施各种举措,最终向土著社区注入资金和资源。2019 年,我们在巴西中部皮门特尔·巴尔博萨原住民保留地的三个 A'uwẽ(Xavante)社区进行了一项民族志研究,目的是分析人们如何理解和追求粮食安全。我们提出,在所研究的社区中,A'uwẽ 食物互惠的复杂网络是缓解饥饿和严重缺乏食物的基本策略。我们表明,在 A'uwẽ 中,自 20 世纪 70 年代以来发展起来的混合经济已经证明能够抵御外部政府投入的可用性和特征方面的剧烈变化和不确定性。