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Trash in the Water: An Indigenous People Confronts Waste

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dc.creator Howe, James
dc.creator McDonald, Libby
dc.date 2015
dc.date.accessioned 2016-03-09T15:17:04Z
dc.date.available 2016-03-09T15:17:04Z
dc.identifier.citation Howe, James y Libby McDonald. 2015. Trash in the Water: An Indigenous People Confronts Waste. Revista Harvard Review of Latin America, winter 2015, 14(2):60-62. es_ES
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10469/8102
dc.description The guna or kuna, an indigenous people of Panama, suffer from the same waste problems as the rest of the world, with the added complications caused by life on tiny, crowded coral islands. The Guna, originally mainland dwellers, moved offshore in the 19th century, thus escaping mosquitoes, snakes, and the diseases spread by mosquitoes while facilitating access to foreign trading boats. Today, of the forty-nine villages in the autonomous indigenous reserve called Guna Yala, all but ten are located on islands along the northeast Caribbean coast, with populations ranging in size from a few hundred to several thousand. es_ES
dc.format p. 60-62 es_ES
dc.language eng es_ES
dc.publisher Cambridge. MA, Estados Unidos : Harvard University. es_ES
dc.subject DESECHOS es_ES
dc.subject AGUA es_ES
dc.subject PUEBLOS INDÍGENAS es_ES
dc.subject PANAMÁ es_ES
dc.subject ISLA GUNA (PANAMÁ) es_ES
dc.subject DESPERDICIOS DOMÉSTICOS es_ES
dc.subject TURISMO es_ES
dc.title Trash in the Water: An Indigenous People Confronts Waste es_ES
dc.type article es_ES
dc.tipo.spa Artículo es_ES


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