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The Middle and Lower Xingu: the response to the crystallization of different temporalities in the production of regional space1 1 The present work has been produced from the discussions and field work linked to the project entitled “Urbis Amazônia: What is the nature of the urban aspects of the contemporary Amazon?”, funded by the Vale Technological Institute - Sustainable Development (known as ITV-DS) and by the Vale Foundation through an established agreement with the Foundation for Science, Technology and Space Applications (FUNCATE). The authors would like to thank the funding institution and other colleagues from the Urbis collective for their contributions.

Abstract

While the region of the Middle and Lower Xingu has been a protagonist during many episodes of Brazilian history, it remains unknown to a large cross-section of society. Within this perspective, we have revealed some of the different elements responsible for the production of regional space by joining theoretical exercise with empirical, which signifies combining some of the knowledge that has been produced on the region with the discourse of some of the different agents involved in its transformation. Accordingly, the following processes were adopted as markers: colonization, the opening of the Trans-Amazonian, land conflicts and the construction of the Belo Monte Hydroelectric Power Plant. As part of this collective effort, based on interviews with the central institutions (from the First, Second and Third sectors), and with communities from different locations within the region, this article gathers together arguments that contribute to the debate regarding the accumulated processes in the Brazilian Amazon, and particularly in the Middle and Lower Xingu.

Keywords:
Medium and Low Xingu region; Trans-Amazonian; land conflicts; Belo Monte Hydroelectric Power Plant; the Amazon

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