"Caribbean diaspora" Essays and Research Papers

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    slaves from Africa to parts of the New World to grow sugar plantations. Many slaves were traded along the middle passage‚ which was an ocean passage from Africa to the New World across the Atlantic Ocean. Most slaves were shipped to Brazil and the Caribbean than anywhere else in the New World. The slaves were tightly packed into the lower deck of a ship filled with many germs that would never be cleaned. The lower deck showed as a way to restrain the Africans from jumping off the side of the ship to

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    Effects of Slave Trade

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    Portuguese‚ followed by the British and the French. In the 16th and 17th centuries‚ these European colonial powers began to pursue plantation agriculture in their expanding possessions in the New World (North‚ Central‚ and South America‚ and the Caribbean islands)‚ across the Atlantic Ocean. As European demand grew for products such as sugar‚ tobacco‚ rice‚ indigo‚ and cotton‚ and as more New World lands became available for European use‚ the need for plantation labor increased‚ thus‚ creating the

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    riod of 1450-1750 opened up a global network of connections between the news worlds and old worlds. This era begins with the discovery and following European colonization of the Americas and the African slave trade (diaspora). The interactions focused on three regions: Western Europe‚ Africa‚ and the Americas. The communication expanded the economies of all three regions while damaging social structures of Africa and forging new social structures in the Americas By 1450‚ Europe was on the verge

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    Caribbean Sexuality

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    selected and specific materials to be done on attempting to assist people of the Caribbean acknowledge and approach in a conscious manner human sexuality. He thought that Caribbean people needed to recognize‚ understand and accept their sexuality rather than approach it in an air of ambivalence. In his view‚ the materials written in this field‚ had an absence of how to really apply pastoral counseling to the Caribbean people; who in his mind had a characteristic history and culture pertaining to their

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    Caribbean Civilisation

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    The outlined article looks at the scope of respect and value place upon the educational system in a Caribbean society. The article reveals that within Jamaica’s society that there are two different set of cultural stand points. Firstly‚ we see that there are individuals that have little or no respect for persons that are charged with the educating of youngsters in the school system. They are also least concerned about the lives and safety of their fellow citizens. We can also recognize as well

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    Caribbean Journal

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    Caribbean Journal He stands outside the fencing looking in. Inside‚ sunbathers relishing their flesh - some white‚ some black‚ and some of other skins - diving and swimming‚ feign not to notice him‚ fingers of doubt spread wide‚ gripping holes of mesh. Some people on the grass are picnicking. His pants are torn; he does not have a shirt; his face‚ a mask of sun-flaked grease and dirt‚ too young to understand his day’s events‚ dreams mountain-slide of magic dollars and cents to cancel

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    Slavery in the Caribbean

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    Europeans came into contact with the Caribbean after Columbus’s momentous journeys in 1492‚ 1496 and 1498. The desire for expansion and trade led to the settlement of the colonies. The indigenous peoples‚ according to our sources mostly peaceful Tainos and warlike Caribs‚ proved to be unsuitable for slave labour in the newly formed plantations‚ and they were quickly and brutally decimated. The descendants of this once thriving community can now only be found in Guiana and Trinidad. The slave trade

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    indentured servitude had on the Americas could be obtained by government statistics on the economy in the Americas before and after the years of indentured servitude. The spread of indentured servitude in the years 1834-1919 connected Africa with the Caribbean and with Asia‚ as well as Asia with the Americas‚ as shown in the map in Document 3. The number of slaves working in Mauritius are shown in

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    Integration in the Caribbean

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    THE EDUCATION SYSTEM The structure of education in Jamaican has gone through several stages of development over the years. The former education system was established in an agrarian society‚ intended to maintain and reinforce a social structure characterized by a small white elite and a largely black labouring class‚ however it has now evolved into an Industrial and Information and Communications Technology (ICT) Age. This has contributed to shaping a system which is dynamic in nature‚ preparing

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    Charis H

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    Name: Charis H. R. Seejattan Course: FOUN 1011 Caribbean Civilization Assignment: Book Report “Beyond Massa” by John F. Campbell John F. Campbell‚ Ph.D.‚ author of the book “Beyond Massa: Sugar Management in the British Caribbean‚ 1770-1834” has been a lecturer in the Department of History at the University of the West Indies since 2001. Having earned his Bachelor of Arts degree and Master of Philosophy (majoring in History) at the St. Augustine campus‚ as well as his second Master of Philosophy

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