ABSTRACT
Based on the ethnographic account of an Aty Guasu assembly of the Kaiowa and the Guarani of Mato Grosso do Sul (Brazil), this article proposes an approximation between indigenous formulations and reflections of political ecology to find parameters that better describe the political proposal of these indigenous peoples and their clashes with local landowners and the federal government. The objective is to discuss, based on an iconic case, the limits and scope of our democratic debate as it pertains to the Latin American indigenous movements..
KEYWORDS:
Kaiowa and Guarani; Political ecology; Nature; Democracy; Cosmopolitics