“We, the People” 2020 Calendar

Discover a new tribal portrait each month with the Survival International “We...

“We, the People” 2019 - The 50th anniversary Calendar

Our “We, The People” 50th Anniversary Calendar features stunning portraits of...

"We, the People" 2018 Calendar

Discover a new tribal portrait each month with the Survival International "We...

"We, the People" 2015 Calendar

In 2014, Survival International, the global movement for tribal peoples’ righ...

Faces of Genocide

To mark Columbus Day, Survival International reveals current and recent cases...

Brazil's Tribes

There are around 240 indigenous tribes in Brazil today, from the savannahs an...

Operation Awá

After Survival's global campaign to save the Awá from extinction, the Brazili...

Tribal Heroines

On International Women's Day, Survival International profiles the lives and s...

The Awá: Sebastião Salgado's gallery

Survival International continues its high-profile campaign for the Awá, by co...

Universal Children's Day

To mark Universal Children's Day on November 20, Survival International publi...

Maasai

Carol Beckwith and Angela Fisher have been photographing African tribes for t...

Refugees in our own country

In September 2013, the female chief of a Guarani community led her community ...

The Hunt

Who are the world's hunter-gatherers? Where do they live and what threats do...

Ingenious skills of tribal peoples

From the hunting peoples of Canada to the hunter-gatherers of Africa, tribal ...

Festivals

As global monoculture erodes cultural diversity, the variety of tribal festiv...

Fathers' Day

'This is my Father's Father's Father's land,' said a Bushman of his home in B...

The Matsés

The Matsés know no borders. For them, the land which stretches across Brazili...

Celebrities supporting the Awá

Who's speaking up for "Earth's most threatened tribe":/awa? Get creative t...

'Mother'

The words 'Aiya', 'Ngu' and 'Anaanak' have the same meaning in different trib...

Tribal Heroines

On International Women's Day, Survival International profiles the stories of ...

People of the Reindeer

Survival International has campaigned for the rights of reindeer herding trib...

We didn't know about sugar in the blood

On World Diabetes Day, Survival examines the causes behind the escalating rat...

The Hadza

Just south of the Equator, between the soda waters of Tanzania's Lake Eyasi a...

Tribal Olympians

Survival reveals some of the astonishing skills of the world's tribal peoples...

Peru's uncontacted tribes threatened by gas project

They live no more than 100 kms from Machu Picchu. Today, however, the future ...

We are inside it, and it is inside us

Tribal societies depend on their environments. To mark the UN conference on s...

Nitassinan: walking in the footsteps of Innu ancestors

Survival International joins a group of Innu walkers on a journey across thei...

The Ashaninka

The Ashaninka of Acre state, Brazil, have recently reported encountering doze...

Fishermen of Amazonia

The state government of Mato Grosso in Brazil is building a series of dams on...

Voices from the Lower Omo Valley

The ancestral homes of Ethiopia's Omo river tribespeople are being destroyed ...

'Today we are crying with happiness'

A celebration of the Bushmen's historic court victory against their expulsion...

The Nenets of Siberia

The Nenets of Siberia have migrated across their lands for thousands of years...

'Our souls touch': Sámi reindeer herders

The Sámi are the indigenous reindeer herders of Scandinavia. These stunning p...

Guardians of the world's rainforests

_It breathes, though you don't notice it_, says Davi Kopenawa of his Amazon h...

'We are here for our children'

From the green depths of the Amazon to the icy reaches of the Arctic, childre...

Nine facts for 9 August: UN Indigenous Day

Celebrate the UN Day of indigenous peoples with this special gallery – nine l...

'We learn with the great spirits'

For the Yanomami of the Brazilian Amazon, the spirit world is a fundamental p...

'The ocean is our universe'

_'Everything happens at sea. We are not people who are bound to any land.'_ ...

'We were made the same as the sand'

In 2006, photo-journalist Dominick Tyler spent time in a Bushman relocation c...