Indians of the Kuikuro ethnic group

Brazil officially recognizes and protects all Indigenous territories

Note: This is an imagined future story, written as if a projected milestone has occurred. It is based on current trends and evidence, not confirmed events.

In a ceremony at the Palácio do Planalto in Brasília, Brazil’s federal government has completed the demarcation of all 1,191 territories identified in the country’s official Indigenous lands registry — a process that began in earnest in 2023 C.E., when President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva signed the recognition of six Indigenous territories on his first day in office and pledged that more would follow. The final demarcations, signed into law this year, bring full legal protection to lands spanning more than 430,000 square miles of forest, savanna, and river basin — home to more than one million Indigenous people from over 300 distinct peoples.

Key projections

  • Indigenous land protection: All 1,191 identified Indigenous territories in Brazil now carry full legal demarcation status, covering roughly 13% of the country’s land area.
  • Deforestation reduction: Deforestation rates inside demarcated Indigenous territories have historically run far below rates in unprotected areas, and completed demarcation is projected to lock in those gains across the entire registry.
  • Carbon storage: Indigenous territories in the Brazilian Amazon store an estimated 33 billion metric tons of carbon, making full protection one of the most significant climate interventions in the country’s history.

The milestone caps nearly a decade of legal and political struggle. When Lula returned to the presidency in January 2023 C.E., Brazil’s Indigenous lands demarcation process had been effectively frozen for four years. The previous administration had not demarcated a single new territory. Lula’s first-day signings — covering peoples including the Kariri in Ceará and the Tremembé in Maranhão — were described at the time by Indigenous advocates as a signal, not a solution.

FUNAI, Brazil’s National Indigenous Peoples Foundation, and FUNAI’s successor coordination body have worked alongside the Articulation of Indigenous Peoples of Brazil (APIB) since 2023 C.E. to clear a backlog of territories at various stages of the demarcation pipeline. The process requires anthropological studies, physical boundary-marking, presidential decrees, and registration — each stage vulnerable to legal challenge from landowners, agribusiness interests, and local governments.

What the path looked like

Progress was not linear. A 2023 C.E. Supreme Court ruling initially threatened to limit the government’s ability to recognize lands where Indigenous peoples had been forcibly displaced before 1988 C.E. — the year Brazil’s constitution enshrined Indigenous land rights. That ruling, known as the “marco temporal” or time-frame thesis, was contested by APIB and ultimately softened by subsequent legislation and court interpretation, allowing demarcation to continue on most contested territories.

This is one of many Indigenous land rights victories that have reshaped how governments relate to Native peoples in the 21st century C.E. Internationally, Brazil’s process drew on — and contributed to — frameworks developed under the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which affirms the right of Indigenous peoples to own, use, and control their traditional lands.

The Center for International Forestry Research has documented that Indigenous-managed territories consistently show lower deforestation rates than other protected areas of equivalent size — a finding that gave the demarcation push economic and climate credibility alongside its human rights rationale.

Who it affects — and how unevenly

For the more than 100 peoples living in voluntary isolation or initial contact — the highest concentration of such groups anywhere on Earth — demarcation offers a perimeter of legal protection, though enforcement remains a serious and ongoing challenge. Illegal miners, loggers, and land speculators continue to violate Indigenous territory boundaries even where demarcation is complete, and the Brazilian federal environmental agency IBAMA has faced persistent resource shortages in its inspection and enforcement operations.

Women from Indigenous communities, who have led much of the advocacy work through organizations like the APIB network, note that legal demarcation is necessary but not sufficient. Access to healthcare, education delivered in Indigenous languages, and infrastructure built with community consent remain unevenly distributed across demarcated territories, particularly in remote areas of the Amazon basin.

A foundation, not a finish line

Demarcation establishes a legal boundary. It does not automatically repair rivers contaminated by decades of illegal mining, restore forest cleared before the boundary was drawn, or return cultural knowledge lost during periods of forced displacement. Leaders from the Yanomami people — whose territory, demarcated in 1992 C.E., was still being invaded by tens of thousands of illegal miners as recently as 2023 C.E. — have been clear that recognition without enforcement is incomplete protection.

Still, what Brazil has achieved by 2032 C.E. is without precedent in its own history. No prior government completed the demarcation process for all territories in the registry. The combination of political will, sustained Indigenous organizing, international climate finance, and a Supreme Court ultimately unwilling to strip constitutional rights entirely made a path through terrain that once looked impassable.

For peoples who have defended these forests for generations without legal title, the signed decrees represent something the law is not always able to deliver: acknowledgment that they were here first, and that they have the right to remain.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Mongabay — Brazil’s President Lula recognizes six Indigenous lands and says more to come

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

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