KeywordsNear Future, Slow-Paced, Observational, Realism, Based on True Stories, Native American, Dreamy, Inspirational, Profound, Family Friendly, Thought-Provoking, Advocacy, Wildlife, Travel, Social Issues, Beach
TagsYucatan Peninsula, Tourism, indigenous peoples, Land Dispute, nature, territory, Mayan, maya, Train, Indigenous Rights,, Cultural heritage, Reclaiming Identity, Community Tourism, environmental impact, Community Voices, economic development, indigenous communities, preservation of culture, Social Justice, indigenous land rights, ecotourism, Historical, Modernization, Tradition, Cultural Appropriation, Local Economies, Activism, Mexico, peninsula, Transportation, infrastructure, Indigenous Knowledge, system thinking, Touristification, oppression, power to the people, spending power, autonomy, railroad, railroads, future, colonization, decolonization, decolonial, environmental, Environmental Issues, neoliberalism, water is life, industrialization, deindustrialization, way of life, land defense, tree protectors, environmental protector, Observational Documentary, preservation, cultural, degrowth, real estate, cenote, caves, Humanitarianism, Slavery, wage slavery, greed, Earth, Mother Earth, Merida, valladolid, tulum, Bacalar, Cancun, Playa del Carmen, green gold, henequen, ECOLOGY, hacienda, milpa, mutual aid, dos tohs, felipe carillo puerto, Beach, Community, 2020, pandemic, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, Climate change, Development, progress, Turistification, historical, Tren Maya, Cenotes, Pyramids, Empire, Foreign Investment, historical documentary, Observational, Experimental, pueblo, ancestral wisdom