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Brazil

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

 

  • After more than a week of physical discomfort and skin irritation, Mariualdo do vale Monterio takes a Slit-skin Smear test at the Center of Diagnostics in Marituba. After the test, Maria Gonden, the nurse conducting the procedure, will search Monterio's DNA samples for mycobacterium leprae—the bacterium that causes leprosy. Image by Anton L. Delgado. Brazil, 2020.
    English

    Project

    The Resurgence of Leprosy in Brazil

    A declining number of leprologists rely on questionable data as they try to eliminate the growing...

    author image
    Anton L. Delgado
    Rainforest Investigations Fellow
    READ MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT - The Resurgence of Leprosy in Brazil
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    Watatakalu Yawalapiti, one of the female leaders of the Xingu Women's Movement. Image by Maria Fernanda Ribeiro. Brazil, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Women of the Forest Unite to Protect the Amazon

    "Mulheres do Xingu" (Documentary)

    author image
    Maria Fernanda Ribeiro
    Amazon RJF Grantee
    January 9, 2020
    Publication logo
  • ×
    Watatakalu Yawalapiti, one of the female leaders of the Xingu Women's Movement. Image by Maria Fernanda Ribeiro. Brazil, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Women of the Forest Unite to Protect the Amazon

    Women of the Xingu Unite Against Threats From Bolsonaro's Government (Portuguese)

    author #1 image author #2 image
    Multiple Authors
    January 6, 2020
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    An example of a tapped rubber tree. Image by Esha Chhabra. Brazil, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Restorative Businesses

    The Green Jobs That Could Help Save the Amazon

    author image
    Esha Chhabra
    Grantee
    December 18, 2019
    Publication logo
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    “A lot of people were structured because of Bolsa Verde,” says Ladilson Amaral, resident of the Eixo Forte settlement in Santarém, amid the açaí tree. Image by Maurício Angelo. Brazil, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Austerity and the End of Social Programs Accelerate Amazon Deforestation

    The End of Social Programs for 'Extractivista' Families Threatens the Preservation of the Amazon (Portuguese)

    author image
    Maurício Angelo
    Amazon RJF Grantee
    December 18, 2019
    Publication logo
  • “A lot of people were structured because of Bolsa Verde,” says Ladilson Amaral, resident of the Eixo Forte settlement in Santarém, amid the açaí tree. Image by Maurício Angelo. Brazil, 2019.
    English

    Project

    Austerity and the End of Social Programs Accelerate Amazon Deforestation

    How do the end of programs such as Bolsa Verde, along with the austerity of the Michel Temer and...

    author image
    Maurício Angelo
    Amazon RJF Grantee
    READ MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT - Austerity and the End of Social Programs Accelerate Amazon Deforestation
  • ×
    Researcher Delano Campos scales an 80-meter tower at the Amazon Tall Tower Observatory to collect air samples and maintain instruments. Image by Victor Moriyama. Brazil, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: These Trees Are Climate Superheroes

    Supertrees: Meet the Amazonian Giant That Helps the Rainforest Make Its Own Rain

    author #1 image author #2 image
    Multiple Authors
    December 13, 2019
    Publication logo
  • Joane beside a bonfire used to burn plastic waste. Image by Pablo Albarenga. Brazil, 2019.

    Event

    Pablo Albarenga at International Society of Tropical Foresters Conference

    Read More
  • ×
    If Afrormosia goes extinct, it could threaten the forest’s resilience and stability, increasing greenhouse gas emissions and unleashing more chaotic weather on Africa 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.
    English
    PART OF: These Trees Are Climate Superheroes

    These 3 Supertrees Can Protect Us From Climate Collapse

    author #1 image author #2 image
    Multiple Authors
    December 12, 2019
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    Cacique (or "Chief") Ezequiel João in front of the walls of his residence. "Demarcação Já!" (or "Demarcation Now!" is written as a form of protest to the government's long delay in demarcating and protecting the territories that were promised to his village. Image by Rafael Lima. Brazil, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: 'Not a Single Drop More': The Indigenous Struggle for Cultural Survival in Brazil

    The Indigenous Struggle for Land Recognition: Demarcação Já

    author image
    Rafael Lima
    Pulitzer Center Alum
    November 25, 2019
    Publication logo
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    A truck motors along the Trans-Amazonian Highway, straddling protected indigenous land at right and unprotected land that has been clear-cut at left, in Pará State, Brazil. Image by Spenser Heaps. Brazil, 2019.
    English
    PART OF: Can the Amazon Rainforest Be Saved?

    A Nun, a Shooting and the Unlikely Legacy That Could Save the Amazon Rainforest

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    Jesse Hyde
    International RJF Grantee
    November 13, 2019
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  • ×
    Image by Hector Bottai/Creative Commons. Brazil, 2015.
    English
    PART OF: Uphill Climb: Amazon Birds Might Survive Warming But They’re Not Out of the Woods

    Fowl Language: Amazonian Bird's Mating Call Noisiest in World

    author image
    Daniel Grossman
    Southeast Asia RJF Advisory Committee Member
    October 22, 2019
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