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Brazil

Use the Pulitzer Center Lesson Builder to find and create lesson plans on this country.

 

  • If Afrormosia goes extinct, it could threaten the forest’s resilience and stability, increasing greenhouse gas emissions and unleashing more chaotic weather on frica and the rest of the world. It’s in everyone’s interest to protect these trees. Image by Sarah Waiswa. Democratic Republic of Congo, 2019.

    Event

    Vox 'Supertrees:' A Virtual Discussion

    Read More
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    Com um passado de trabalho análogo à escravidão, ex-seringueiros se organizam e viram fornecedores importantes da indústria de cosméticos. Um exemplo de como lucrar diretamente com uma Amazônia preservada. Imagem cortesia de DW Brasil.
    English
    PART OF: From the Amazon Forest to the Industry

    Video: Life in an Extractive Reserve in the Amazon Forest (Portuguese)

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    Multiple Authors
    April 14, 2020
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    Toll payment point on a BR-163 highway in Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil. Image by rafapress / Shutterstock. Brazil, undated.
    English
    PART OF: Bolsonaro's Plan for the Brazilian Amazon

    Bolsonaro's Highway Could Destroy the Largest Tropical Forest Reserve in the World (Spanish)

    author image
    Fernanda Wenzel
    Rainforest Investigations Fellow
    April 8, 2020
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    A wheel loader tidying the piles of wood logs extracted from the Amazonian forest. Image by Tarcisio Schnaider / Shutterstock. Brazil, undated.
    English
    PART OF: Can the Amazon Rainforest Be Saved?

    Massacre in the Amazon

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    Jesse Hyde
    International RJF Grantee
    March 24, 2020
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    Soldiers pave some of the last miles of BR-163, a highway cutting through the Amazon basin which Bolsonaro had pledged to complete. For years, trucks carrying grain for export have lumbered along this slow, muddy road. Its completion significantly reduces transport time. Image by Heriberto Araújo. Brazil, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: High Stakes: China in the Amazon

    Conquering El Dorado: Why Bolsonaro is Winning in the Wild Amazon Jungle (Spanish)

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    Multiple Authors
    March 23, 2020
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    A worker at Grupo Vale do Verde looks on as grain is moved at one of its many facilities in the state of Mato Grosso. Big Ag in Brazil wants to see better transport options, including the construction of a railway, the Ferrogrão — “the grain train” — that would cut across the jungle. Image by Melissa Chan. Brazil, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: High Stakes: China in the Amazon

    China, Brazil, and the Pursuit for Pork

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    Melissa Chan
    International RJF Grantee
    March 10, 2020
    Publication logo
  • Urarina village called Nueva Unión lies on the Chambira River, which runs through vast peatlands in Peru’s Pastaza-Marañón Foreland basin. Image by Dado Galdieri. Peru, undated.
    English

    Project

    Carbon Chronicles

    With journalists in Indonesia and Brazil, the stories in this project highlight how tropical forests...

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    Multiple Authors
    READ MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT - Carbon Chronicles
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    The forest and the farm near the Roosevelt River, Brazil. Image by Caio Mota. Brazil, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Roosevelt River: Life in the Most Dangerous Region of the Amazon

    The Amazon's Invisible War (Portuguese)

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    Multiple Authors
    March 10, 2020
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  • Roosevelt River
    English

    Project

    Roosevelt River: Life in the Most Dangerous Region of the Amazon

    An expedition to Resex Guariba Roosevelt, in Mato Grosso, through the Brazilian Amazon wildness, to...

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    Multiple Authors
    READ MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT - Roosevelt River: Life in the Most Dangerous Region of the Amazon
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    Trucks carry soy, corn, and beef along one of the main highways cutting across the Amazon basin. Much of these food commodities are bound for China. Image by Heriberto Araújo. Brazil, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: High Stakes: China in the Amazon

    How China’s Demand for Soybeans is Fueling the Destruction of the Amazon Rainforest

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    Multiple Authors
    March 6, 2020
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  • In a climate emergency, mangrove trees are truly extraordinary: Their ability to store carbon, under the right conditions, is unmatched by any other tree on Earth. Image by Ardiles Rante. Indonesia, 2019.
    English

    Pulitzer Center Update

    Vox 'Supertrees' Project Wins Scripps Howard Award

    The winners of the 67th Scripps Howard Awards represent among the best of journalism from 2019.

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    Multiple Authors
    March 4, 2020
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    China is Brazil's largest trade partner, buying much of its beef and soy. Bolsonaro has leaned into this partnership — but with potentially risky downsides. Image by Heriberto Araújo. Brazil, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: High Stakes: China in the Amazon

    How Bolsonaro’s Risky Bet on China in the Amazon Could Backfire

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    Multiple Authors
    February 26, 2020
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