Coercive labor in Amazonia. Global Perspectives on Legal History Series (Frankfurt am Main: Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory), Forthcoming .
"Co-authored with Dries Lyna. “Administrating Differences / Local Responses”. In Oxford Handbook of Law in Early Modern European Colonies Edited by Tamar Herzog, Heikki Pihlajamäki, Airton Ribeiro (Oxford University Press), Forthcoming.
“Paths of Faith and Captivity: The Tribunal of the Junta das Missões and the Trans-Amazonian Routes of Indigenous People (17th–18th Centuries)”. In Race and Slavery in the European Colonial Empires: Narratives and Debates, 15th–18th Centuries Edited by Jaime Ricardo Gouveia (Palgrave Macmillan), Forthcoming.
“Os ventres mestiços e as memórias indígenas: as estratégias cativas no Tribunal da Junta das Missões na Amazónia portuguesa (século XVIII)”. In Esclavas, horras y libres. Historia de mujeres en los mundos ibéricos, siglos XVI–XIX Edited by Rafael M. Pérez Garcia, Manuel Chaves, Eduardo França Paiva (Sevilha: Editorial Universidad de Sevilla, 2023), 389-404.
“Crime, coerção e mobilidades: as mulheres nas rotas transamazónicas de indígenas no século XVIII”. In Criminalidades, Direito e Justiça no Mundo Ibérico Edited by José Subtil; Cláudia C. Azeredo Atallah; Maria Sarita Mota (Buenos Aires: Editorial Teseo, 2022), 419-444.
“Liberdades mestiças: a (co)existência da escravidão indígena, africana e mestiça no Maranhão (século XVIII)”. In O Mundo do Trabalho na Amazônia Edited by José Alves de Souza Júnior and Livia L. Silva Forte Maia (São Paulo: Livraria da Física, 2022) 135-149.
The young and promising historian André Luís Ferreira brings to the forefront the protagonism of Indigenous peoples, especially Indigenous women, who sought their freedom through legal action before the Court of the Board of Missions. If the subject may surprise the reader, what can be said is that the author accomplishes what is most current and rigorous in historical research: methodologically refined, grounded in fascinating sources, and conveyed through an engaging narrative. Those who journey through these pages are invited not only to understand the institutional functioning, agents, and jurisdiction of the Board of Missions of Maranhão, an object long in need of historical analysis, but above all to “enter” the backlands, learn about the rescue expeditions and forced relocations, and follow the negotiations and (re)appropriations carried out by Indigenous peoples in their pursuit of freedom. This is social history at its finest: real human subjects acting as agents of their own trajectories. The compelling narrative, the well-founded historiographical discussion, and the high-quality handling of sources deserve the reader’s close attention. This is not a book solely for historians. It is a work that invites us to learn about the Indigenous peoples of Maranhão and the Amazon in the eighteenth century through the author’s exceptionally qualified research.