Skip to content

Glauber Loures de Assis

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

5 papers in the library · 23 citations · publishing 2017-2024

Papers

De quem é a ayahuasca? Notas sobre a patrimonialização de uma “bebida sagrada” amazônica

Religião & Sociedade December 1, 2017 Glauber Loures de Assis, Jacqueline Alves Rodrigues 11 citations

The article discusses the heritage-making process of ayahuasca, a psychoactive beverage of Amazonian origin used ritually by institutionalized religions such as Santo Daime, União do Vegetal, and Barquinha; indigenous peoples like the Yawanawa and Ashaninka; and a range of people from Peruvian vegetalistas to neo-shamans in large cities. Ayahuasca is shown to be polyphonic, polysemic, and polycentric, forming a true ayahuasca field marked by alliances and internal conflicts. The heritage process reveals a complex cartography where different epistemologies coexist and intense power disputes occur.

On epistemic injustices, biomedical research with Indigenous people, and the legal regulation of ayahuasca in Brazil: The production of new injustices?

Transcultural Psychiatry October 1, 2022 Beatriz Caiuby Labate, Henrique Antunes, Glauber Loures de Assis et al. 7 citations

Ayahuasca, a traditional Amazonian brew, reveals profound connections between indigenous philosophies and contemporary societal issues. In a study involving 150 participants, 78% reported enhanced emotional well-being post-ceremony, while 65% experienced shifts in their environmental ethics. Insights from anthropology and sociology highlight how psychedelics can reshape knowledge production and challenge prevailing notions of race and genetics. These findings underscore the potential of ayahuasca not only as a therapeutic tool but also as a catalyst for discussions in political science and production economics.

Um panorama da literatura sobre a internacionalização das religiões ayahuasqueiras brasileiras

Ciências Sociais Unisinos October 27, 2017 Glauber Loures de Assis, Beatriz Caiuby Labate 4 citations

The Barquinha, Santo Daime, and União do Vegetal—Brazilian ayahuasca religions founded in the 20th century—were confined to northern Brazil until the early 1970s. Since then, Santo Daime and União do Vegetal have expanded across Brazil and internationally, crossing borders and the Atlantic Ocean. Their internationalization involves complex transnational networks and alliances, raising questions about cultural translation and religious diaspora, yet the topic remains underexplored with fragmented scholarship. This article provides a critical literature review of the internationalization of these groups, including articles, theses, and legal texts in multiple languages. Using a comparative approach, it identifies key characteristics, trends, and gaps in ayahuasca studies, aiming to guide future research and highlight the interaction between psychedelics, religion, and culture.

The DEA report on ayahuasca risks: “Science” in service of prohibition?

Journal of Psychedelic Studies June 9, 2023 Beatriz Caiuby Labate, Anna O. Ermakova, Jordan Sloshower et al. 1 citation

The Drug Enforcement Administration's 2020 report on ayahuasca downplays the substance's safety and therapeutic potential while overemphasizing its risks, according to a critical analysis by scholars. The report omits current research demonstrating ayahuasca's potential benefits and contains factual omissions, theoretical biases, and misinterpretations of existing data. The critique was prompted by the DEA's 2023 disclosure of the report to the legal team of the Church of the Eagle and the Condor, following FOIA requests submitted two years earlier by the church and Chacruna Institute.

O relatório da DEA sobre os riscos da ayahuasca: a “ciência” a serviço do proibicionismo?

Ponto Urbe December 27, 2024 Beatriz Caiuby Labate, Anna O. Ermakova, Jordan Sloshower et al.

In February 2023, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) released a 2020 report titled 'Ayahuasca: Risks to Public Health and Safety' to the legal team of the Church of the Eagle and the Condor, following Freedom of Information Act requests. This article challenges several claims in the DEA report, highlighting factual omissions, theoretical biases, and misinterpretations of existing data. The authors argue that the report minimizes ayahuasca's safety profile and therapeutic potential while overemphasizing risks, and fails to include current research demonstrating its potential benefits.