Nomadic, Semi-Nomadic & Isolated Peoples

Guaviare, Meta & Amazon-Brazil-Peru Border

Peoples who live beyond the settled world. Their right to remain uncontacted is a right to life — not a curiosity for outsiders.

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Nomadic, Semi-Nomadic & Isolated Peoples

Some of the peoples in this section live beyond the settled world. They should not be visited. They should not be contacted. Their right to remain isolated is recognized under international law, Colombian legislation, and the most basic principle of human dignity.

Dulce Amazónica presents this section because visibility matters — not for tourism, but for protection. Peoples in voluntary isolation have survived for centuries precisely by maintaining distance from outsiders. Any contact with them — including well-intentioned visits — can transmit diseases for which they have no immunity, and can cause irreversible cultural and demographic disruption.

The Nukak people made peaceful contact with Colombian society in 1988. Since then, they have faced decades of forced displacement, conflict, narco-incursion, and sedentarization pressure. Their story is not one of "discovery." It is one of extraordinary cultural resilience under impossible conditions.

The Peoples of This Region

4 peoples in this region

Nukak

The last semi-nomadic hunter-gatherers to make peaceful contact in Colombia (1988). Decades of displacement, armed conflict, and coca economy pressure have tested their survival — but not ended it.

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Jiw

Semi-nomadic forest people of the Meta and Guaviare rivers — forcibly displaced by decades of conflict, now in active territorial recovery.

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Yuri & Passé

In confirmed voluntary isolation in the Colombia-Brazil-Peru border region. Their right to remain uncontacted is a right to life. Do not attempt contact. Read the ethical position.

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Peoples in Voluntary Isolation

What voluntary isolation means, why it is a rational and legally protected choice, and what protection requires from the rest of us.

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On the Right to Isolation

The right to voluntary isolation is not a colonial construct. It is a human right codified in the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and protected under Colombian law (Constitutional Court Ruling SU-123, 2018). For peoples who have chosen isolation — like the Yuri and Passé — the decision is not one of ignorance. It is one of knowledge. They know the outside world exists. They have chosen not to engage with it. That choice must be absolute, respected without exception, and never reframed as "an opportunity to make contact." If you are planning to enter isolated territories, do not. If you know someone who is, stop them. Read more: Peoples in Voluntary Isolation — what the right to isolation means and why it must be defended.