This article examines how Amerindian net-activism is articulated in digital media, taking into account ethnic diversity and social vulnerabilities, during the pandemic period. It begins with an analysis of three Instagram profiles: @midiaindiaoficial, @apiboficial, and @visibilidadeindigena. The publications of these profiles are characterized by: I) mobilization and dissemination of information about pandemic-related care, vaccination, and updating statistical data (vaccinated, deceased, and infected); II) raising awareness and denouncing violations of Amerindian rights; and III) disseminating their achievements in the fields of arts, studies, legislation, and others. The authors argue that Indigenous peoples have come to inhabit these digital spaces as an ecology of both struggle and resistance.



