Tuntanain Communal Reserve Explained
The Tuntanain Communal Reserve (Spanish; Castilian: Reserva Comunal Tuntanain) is a protected area in Peru located in the Amazonas Region. It was created in August 2007 by decree of President Alan García.[1] [2] In 2006, PerúPetro granted Hocol, a French oil concern, the right to drill in territories now partially coextensive with the Reserve.[3]
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Notes and References
- Book: ODECOFROC. Carrasco. Sylvia Fisher. Peru: A Chronicle of Deception. 2010. International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs. 978-87-91563-73-7. 33. en.
- Acuña. Roger Merino. January 2015. The politics of extractive governance: Indigenous peoples and socio-environmental conflicts. The Extractive Industries and Society. en. 2. 1. 88. 10.1016/j.exis.2014.11.007.
- Santos-Granero. Fernando. Barclay. Frederica. April 2011. Bundles, Stampers, and Flying Gringos: Native Perceptions of Capitalist Violence in Peruvian Amazonia. The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology. en. 16. 1. 152–153. 10.1111/j.1935-4940.2011.01128.x.