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Organización de Mujeres Indígenas Unidas por la Biodiversidad de Panamá (OMIUB) or “Indigenous Women United for Biodiversity,” is a group founded in 2011 that works to strengthen, develop, and revive Indigenous knowledge in Panama. In 2017 Cultural Survival’s Keepers of the Earth Fund awarded the organization a grant to strengthen  the governance of Kuna, Embera, and Wounaan People by conducting workshops on the newly established law of Consultation and Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC).  

Danae Laura, Bazaar Program Manager, comes to Cultural Survival from a decade of social entrepreneurship and marketing in both the natural food and wellness industries. Danae studied Social Justice and Education as a Martin Luther King Scholar at New York University, lived abroad in Ghana as a Gilman International Fellow, and was recently recognized as an emerging scholar by the Center for Contemplative Mind in Society for her work at Lesley University where she is studying mindfulness as a tool for social justice. 

Por Jonathan González Quiel

Uno de los casos más emblemáticos en Panamá, en las últimas décadas por la defensa del territorio y la autonomía es el caso de las comunidades indígenas Ngäbe del corregimiento de Bagama, que se oponen al proyecto hidroeléctrico de Barro Blanco.

Desde 1980 el gobierno de Panamá, ha tenido interés en los territorios indígenas Ngäbe, para desarrollar proyectos extractivos (mineros e hidroeléctricos) lo que generó reacciones inmediatas para la defensa del territorio, hasta la fecha.

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