Austral Foto
HOME   |   ARCHIVE   |   PORTFOLIO   |   KEYWORDS   |   CONTACT   |  


australfoto > A member of the Landless Workers Movement (MST) attends a meeting at a makeshift camp in the northeastern Brazilian state of Pernambuco. The MST has ended its honeymoon with President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who they supported in the 2002 election, and has begun a campaign of land invasions to speed up agrarian reform. The MST says lula is slow on reform an invasions are the only way to pressure the government. Founded in 1985, the Landless Workers Movement is the largest social movement in Latin America and one of the most successful grassroots movements in the world. Hundreds of thousands of landless peasants have taken onto themselves the task of carrying out a land reform in a country mired by an overly skewed land distribution pattern.  Less than 3% of the population owns two-thirds of Brasil's arable land.  Under Brazil's constitution, the government must redistribute farmland that is unused. Today more than 250,000 families have won land titles to over 15 million acres after MST land takeovers. (Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
australfoto > The Cooperative of Agro-extractivist Producers Lago de Junco (COPALJ) truck, which normally is used to transport babassu nuts and oil to the cooperative press and port, brings local residents back from town on the dusty highway near Largo do Junco in the countryside of Brazil's northeastern state of Maranhao.  The babassu palm, native to this northeastern corner of Brazil, is an important part of the local culture and economy - more than 60 products come from it including oil used for cooking and cosmetics as well as the nutshell which is used as cooking fuel. The Association of Land Reform Settlements of Maranhao State (ASSEMA) an umbrella NGO of associations operated for and by rural peasants and babassu nut crackers helps support the COPALJ;  British NGO Action Aid has helped support ASSEMA since 1999.(AustralFoto/Douglas Engle)
australfoto > The Cooperative of Agro-extractivist Producers Lago de Junco (COPALJ) truck, which normally is used to transport babassu nuts and oil to the cooperative press and port, brings local residents back from town on the dusty highway near Largo do Junco in the countryside of Brazil's northeastern state of Maranhao.  The babassu palm, native to this northeastern corner of Brazil, is an important part of the local culture and economy - more than 60 products come from it including oil used for cooking and cosmetics as well as the nutshell which is used as cooking fuel. The Association of Land Reform Settlements of Maranhao State (ASSEMA) an umbrella NGO of associations operated for and by rural peasants and babassu nut crackers helps support the COPALJ;  British NGO Action Aid has helped support ASSEMA since 1999.(AustralFoto/Douglas Engle)
australfoto > The Association of Land Reform Settlements of Maranhao State (ASSEMA) is an umbrella NGO of associations operated for and by rural peasants and babau nut crackers. Founded in the late 1980s as a result of land conflicts in the region, It's main goal is to improve living conditions in the countryside by promoting local and family oriented agricultural production, while using and preserving the babassu palm trees.The babassu palm, native to this northeastern corner of Brazil, is an important part of the local culture and economy - more than 60 products come from it including oil used for cooking and cosmetics as well as the nutshell which is used as cooking fuel. British NGO Action Aid has helped support ASSEMA since 1999 - in particular the Escola Familia Agricula Antonio Fontenele (EFA). (Australfoto/Douglas Engle)(AustralFoto/Douglas Engle)
australfoto > The Association of Land Reform Settlements of Maranhao State (ASSEMA) is an umbrella NGO of associations operated for and by rural peasants and babau nut crackers. Founded in the late 1980s as a result of land conflicts in the region, It's main goal is to improve living conditions in the countryside by promoting local and family oriented agricultural production, while using and preserving the babassu palm trees.The babassu palm, native to this northeastern corner of Brazil, is an important part of the local culture and economy - more than 60 products come from it including oil used for cooking and cosmetics as well as the nutshell which is used as cooking fuel. British NGO Action Aid has helped support ASSEMA since 1999 - in particular the Escola Familia Agricula Antonio Fontenele (EFA). (Australfoto/Douglas Engle)(AustralFoto/Douglas Engle)
australfoto > Sabrina, 3, sits near her mother Elizabete Lima de Souza, 33, left, in the countryside of Brazil's northeastern state of Maranhao. Sabrina attends a pre-school which the Action Aid-supported Association of Land Reform Settlements of Maranhao State (ASSEMA) helps support. ASSEMA is an umbrella NGO of associations operated for and by rural peasants and babassu nut crackers, The babassu palm, native to this northeastern corner of Brazil, is an important part of the local culture and economy - more than 60 products come from it including oil used for cooking and cosmetics as well as the nutshell which is used as cooking fuel.(AustralFoto/Douglas Engle)
australfoto > Sabrina, 3, runs outside her home in the countryside of Brazil's northeastern state of Maranhao. Sabrina attends a pre-school which the Action Aid-supported Association of Land Reform Settlements of Maranhao State (ASSEMA) helps support. ASSEMA is an umbrella NGO of associations operated for and by rural peasants and babassu nut crackers, The babassu palm, native to this northeastern corner of Brazil, is an important part of the local culture and economy - more than 60 products come from it including oil used for cooking and cosmetics as well as the nutshell which is used as cooking fuel. (AustralFoto/Douglas Engle)
australfoto > Sabrina, 3, stands near her Babassu nut-cracking mother Elizabete Lima de Souza, 33, in the countryside of Brazil's northeastern state of Maranhao. Sabrina attends a pre-school which the Action Aid-supported Association of Land Reform Settlements of Maranhao State (ASSEMA) helps support. ASSEMA is an umbrella NGO of associations operated for and by rural peasants and babassu nut crackers, The babassu palm, native to this northeastern corner of Brazil, is an important part of the local culture and economy - more than 60 products come from it including oil used for cooking and cosmetics as well as the nutshell which is used as cooking fuel.(AustralFoto/Douglas Engle)
australfoto > Sabrina, 3, stands near her Babassu nut-cracking mother Elizabete Lima de Souza, 33, in the countryside of Brazil's northeastern state of Maranhao. Sabrina attends a pre-school which the Action Aid-supported Association of Land Reform Settlements of Maranhao State (ASSEMA) helps support. ASSEMA is an umbrella NGO of associations operated for and by rural peasants and babassu nut crackers, The babassu palm, native to this northeastern corner of Brazil, is an important part of the local culture and economy - more than 60 products come from it including oil used for cooking and cosmetics as well as the nutshell which is used as cooking fuel.(AustralFoto/Douglas Engle)
A member of the Landless Workers Movement (MST) attends a meeting at a makeshift camp in the northeastern Brazilian state of Pernambuco. The MST has ended its honeymoon with President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who they supported in the 2002 election, and has begun a campaign of land invasions to speed up agrarian reform. The MST says lula is slow on reform an invasions are the only way to pressure the government. Founded in 1985, the Landless Workers Movement is the largest social movement in Latin America and one of the most successful grassroots movements in the world. Hundreds of thousands of landless peasants have taken onto themselves the task of carrying out a land reform in a country mired by an overly skewed land distribution pattern. Less than 3% of the population owns two-thirds of Brasil's arable land. Under Brazil's constitution, the government must redistribute farmland that is unused. Today more than 250,000 families have won land titles to over 15 million acres after MST land takeovers. (Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
australfoto > A member of the Landless Workers Movement (MST) attends a meeting at a makeshift camp in the northeastern Brazilian state of Pernambuco. The MST has ended its honeymoon with President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who they supported in the 2002 election, and has begun a campaign of land invasions to speed up agrarian reform. The MST says lula is slow on reform an invasions are the only way to pressure the government. Founded in 1985, the Landless Workers Movement is the largest social movement in Latin America and one of the most successful grassroots movements in the world. Hundreds of thousands of landless peasants have taken onto themselves the task of carrying out a land reform in a country mired by an overly skewed land distribution pattern.  Less than 3% of the population owns two-thirds of Brasil's arable land.  Under Brazil's constitution, the government must redistribute farmland that is unused. Today more than 250,000 families have won land titles to over 15 million acres after MST land takeovers. (Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
A member of the Landless Workers Movement (MST) attends a meeting at a makeshift camp in the northeastern Brazilian state of Pernambuco. The MST has ended its honeymoon with President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who they supported in the 2002 election, and has begun a campaign of land invasions to speed up agrarian reform. The MST says lula is slow on reform an invasions are the only way to pressure the government. Founded in 1985, the Landless Workers Movement is the largest social movement in Latin America and one of the most successful grassroots movements in the world. Hundreds of thousands of landless peasants have taken onto themselves the task of carrying out a land reform in a country mired by an overly skewed land distribution pattern. Less than 3% of the population owns two-thirds of Brasil's arable land. Under Brazil's constitution, the government must redistribute farmland that is unused. Today more than 250,000 families have won land titles to over 15 million acres after MST land takeovers. (Australfoto/Douglas Engle)
See photo in original gallery.

Comments

|

New comment:

Name: Email: Link:


To foil spammers, enter this code: copy this text in this box: Code unreadable?

Add Comment Cancel

Copyright © 2006 / 2007 - Austral Foto • Todos os direitos reservados •