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Project March 31, 2026

Roots Without Memory: Why Cultural Erosion Is the Amazon’s Invisible Gateway to Deforestation

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The Boiling River, or Shanay Timpishka in Quechua, at the gates of the traditional plant medicine retreat, Huishtin Sanctuary. Image by Michele Calamaio. Peru, 2025.

In the Peruvian Amazon, prosecutors and the Supervisory Agency for Forest Resources and Wildlife (OSINFOR) documentation show how “ghost paper forests” enable illegal logging, with community permits rented or sold and used to launder timber from protected or unauthorized areas.

Around the Boiling River in Ucayali, deforestation and land pressure linked to eco-tourism and spiritual businesses are reshaping management of forest ecosystems, sidelining traditional authority, language, and land rights.

The erosion of Indigenous governance is a key driver, weakening communal systems and opening the door to corruption and deforestation from within.

In response, Peru’s forest system is shifting toward reforms that—despite formally involving Indigenous communities in governance, monitoring, and decision-making—are still weak in enforcement.

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