Project Brazil | Territory As Policy Tool | Standalone Draft

Territory As Policy Tool
in Brazilian Agrarian Power

A standalone paired map-and-data plate showing how land power operates territorially while its strength is read through aligned quantitative panels.

Task 6: territory + data pair Standalone HTML/SVG
Task 6 | Territory As Policy Tool

The map explains where land power operates; the bars explain how strong it is.

This plate pairs a stylized territorial map with non-map quantitative views. The map is used only where geography matters: Amazon/Cerrado frontier, indigenous land pressure, and logistic corridors. Magnitudes stay in aligned bars and small multiples.

Territory as policy tool A map for geography, aligned bars for comparison. The frontier is political, not only ecological. stylized territorial field Amazon Cerrado soy/cattle frontier indigenous land pressure logistics corridor Map encodes location, adjacency, frontier direction, and conflict zones. non-map evidence panels Land concentration, Gini Brazil 0.87 U.S. approx. 0.74 Congressional ruralist power ~300 / 513 deputies The territorial system enters the state through the caucus. Directed credit and reform capacity Plano Safra R$400B+ INCRA budget is politically thin Political reading The frontier is a policy instrument. Land conversion, credit, caucus power, and legal delay operate as one territorial machine. Integrity check: the map is stylized, not cadastral. Use real geodata only if the figure makes a territorial claim requiring precise boundaries.