Brazilian flag, for article on Indigenous land claims

Brazil’s top court boosts Indigenous rights in landmark ruling

Brazil’s highest court dealt a major blow to efforts to strip Indigenous peoples of their ancestral lands, ruling against a legal doctrine that would have required native communities to prove continuous occupation of land at the moment Brazil’s constitution was signed in 1988 C.E. The decision, reached by six of the court’s 11 justices, immediately restored territory to the Xokleng people of southern Brazil — and set a precedent that could reshape hundreds of similar land disputes across the country.

At a glance

  • Marco temporal ruling: Brazil’s Supreme Court rejected the “marco temporal” doctrine, which had been used to deny Indigenous land claims by requiring proof of physical occupation on September 5, 1988 C.E. — the day the constitution was enacted.
  • Xokleng land rights: The ruling directly restored territory to the Xokleng people, a community of approximately 2,300 in the highlands of Santa Catarina state, whose ancestors were violently expelled from their land in the late 19th and early 20th centuries C.E.
  • Indigenous land claims: Legal experts say the decision could affect hundreds of pending land disputes in which the marco temporal argument was used, representing one of the most sweeping protections for Indigenous territorial rights in Brazil’s modern history.

Why the marco temporal doctrine was so dangerous

The marco temporal argument sounds technical, but its consequences were devastating in practice. It required Indigenous communities to prove they were physically present on a specific piece of land on a single date — September 5, 1988 C.E. — in order to claim legal rights to it.

For communities like the Xokleng, who had been forcibly expelled from their ancestral lands long before that date, the rule was a trap. It punished them twice: once for the original dispossession, and again by using that dispossession as legal grounds to deny any future claim.

The Xokleng’s case stretches back to 2009 C.E., when Santa Catarina’s Environmental Institute evicted the group from lands that had become part of a state nature reserve. When the Xokleng appealed, state authorities invoked the marco temporal rule, arguing that since the community was not living on that specific land in 1988 C.E., they had no claim to it. A lower court agreed. The Xokleng took the case all the way to the Supreme Court, where in 2019 C.E. the justices signaled that the ruling would serve as a binding precedent for similar cases nationwide.

A history of violent dispossession

The Xokleng’s story is a particularly painful chapter in Brazil’s colonial legacy. Anthropologists have documented how, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries C.E., mercenaries were hired to clear the Xokleng from their lands — collecting the ears of people they killed as proof of work to claim payment. Survivors were eventually confined to the Ibirama La-Klãnõ reserve, a 15,000-hectare parcel officially recognized in 1996 C.E., where they live today alongside two other Indigenous groups.

The community has long argued that their ancestral territory was far larger than the land they were eventually granted — and that the marco temporal rule made it nearly impossible to reclaim any of it through legal channels.

What the ruling means going forward

Indigenous advocates and legal scholars described the Supreme Court’s decision as one of the most significant victories for native land rights in Brazil in decades. Because the court explicitly ruled against the marco temporal principle — rather than just resolving the Xokleng case on narrower grounds — it clears the way for other Indigenous groups to challenge evictions and land denials that relied on the same argument.

The decision was met with tears and celebrations outside the court, where members of Indigenous groups from across Brazil had gathered to watch the proceedings. For many, it represented not just a legal win but a long-overdue acknowledgment that their dispossession was real, documented, and wrong.

The ruling also arrives at a politically charged moment. Former president Jair Bolsonaro, who argued that Indigenous land protections had gone “too far” and advocated opening native territories to mining, logging, and agriculture, was defeated by Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in the 2022 C.E. presidential election. But Bolsonaro’s party retains significant influence in Brazil’s Congress and has already moved to curtail the powers of Lula’s newly created Indigenous affairs ministry. The court’s ruling represents a check on that legislative pressure — though it does not resolve the broader political struggle over Brazil’s forests and the people who have lived in them for thousands of years.

Tensions between Indigenous communities and agricultural interests — including tobacco growers and farmers who have worked contested lands for generations — remain unresolved, and implementation of the ruling is likely to be contested in many individual cases.

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For more on this story, see: BBC News

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