Compartir
Título
Toward self-determined reparative justice in Brazil: Indigenous leadership confronting human rights violations
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Justice
Brazil
Human rights
Indigenous communities
Clasificación UNESCO
5506.12 Historia del Derecho y de las Instituciones Jurídicas
5504.02-1 Historia Contemporánea. Área Americana
Fecha de publicación
2025-09-12
Editor
Centre for Latin American Research and Documentation, University of Amsterdam
Citación
Benitez Trinidad, C. and Mesquita Faria, H. (2025) ‘Toward self-determined reparative justice in Brazil: Indigenous leadership confronting human rights violations’, European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies, 0(119), p. 69-79. Available at: https://doi.org/10.32992/erlacs.11315.
Resumen
[EN] Since the publication of the National Truth Commission (CNV) final report in 2014, Brazil
has made significant progress in incorporating indigenous peoples into transitional justice
mechanisms. In 2024, two key milestones marked this process: the progress toward establishing the National Indigenous Truth Commission (CNIV) and the fourth session of the Amnesty
Commission, which, for the first time, considered and approved collective reparation requests
for indigenous peoples affected by the military dictatorship. These events represent a significant shift in addressing reparations by recognising the collective nature of the harms suffered.
This study suggests that these developments pave the way for a justice model that incorporates
indigenous epistemologies, ensuring self-determination in the reparation process. Preliminary
findings indicate that these steps set a crucial precedent for more inclusive and collective justice in Brazil
URI
ISSN
1879-4750
DOI
http://doi.org/10.32992/erlacs.11315
Collections
- BRASILHIS. Artículos [50]













