The Catholic Church played a large role in colonial Latin American society. The Church served as a unifying institution in a society made up of many different kinds of people - Europeans‚ Africans‚ Indigenous‚ and mixed-raced individuals - from a variety of economic backgrounds. Documents from the colonial period show that the Church was a maintainer of Iberian social order‚ and its officials and priests were expected to serve as exemplars of their religion. The Church maintained order and conveyed
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GEORGE REID ANDREWS: AFRO-LATIN AMERICA In this paper‚ I would arguer that the history of USA is intertwined with the issue of Blacks – their enslavement and freedom but it has not as yet been focused that this subject has far greater impact in Central and Latin America‚ thus the greater impact of blacks in Central and Latin America would be the main theme or argument of this paper. This book‚ Afro-Latin America by George Reid‚ is the first attempt to focus on this side of the African Diaspora
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The uneven distribution of resources led to conflict on revolutions in Latin America. There are many reasons for this but there are 3 main reasons to its geographical luck‚ advance weapons ‚ and social structure. One reason for the distribution of resources that led to conflict is geographical luck. This is because there were many places where colonies had been created and settled. Many had been in places where farming wasn’t the best a suitable for it and another well they were great
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Based on their race‚ social status‚ economic status‚ and culture women within colonial Latin American and Brazilian society had different daily routines and lives and assisted the development of the colonies based upon their cultural‚ social‚ and economic status. For African women‚ slave and free‚ along with Native American women their daily routines were dominated by manual labor on fields and domestic labor with much of their labor fueling the economic growth and development of the colonies along
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INTRODUCTION Latin America has been the go-to destination for non-renewable natural resources in recent years and is continuing to attract Canadian-based mining companies more than ever. Latin America currently attracts “25% of global expenditure on mining exploration‚ with six countries leading the way in the region – Mexico‚ Chile‚ Peru‚ Brazil‚ Colombia and Argentina.”(Earls‚ 2013) The World Bank and International Monetary Fund have continued to encourage Latin America to sustain an extractive
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If the victors truly write history‚ then E Bradford Burns’ The Poverty of Progress: Latin America in the Nineteenth Century seeks to give voice to those who lost. Burns highlights the price of progress‚ namely increased reliance on Europe and a declining quality of life for the masses. Furthermore‚ he questions the traditional metrics of progress‚ suggesting that the oft-praised modernization and growth of the era hindered potential development. Burns’ brief preface states an ambitious goal: to
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Spanish founded Colonial Latin America‚ the cultures socially‚ physically‚ and politically united to form a new society. The Spanish‚ Indians‚ and African slaves attempted to embed their homeland’s culture into this new society. This formed a clash of cultures because each came with its own set of norms. The go-betweens played a pivotal role during encounters between the cultures acting as interpreters and the Jesuits as Christian converters. As colonial Latin America society was forming and blending
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In colonial Latin America‚ one aspect of life that was constantly under attack and had to be guarded at all costs was the ideal of one’s Honour. Women in colonial Latin America had to especially be on their guard to protect their honour‚ as an unanswered attack to their honour could ruin a family’s honour. But if a woman’s honour was attacked there were ways for her to protect it. The honour women possessed at the time was said to be not as important as the honour of a man‚ but it is‚ in fact‚ more
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Hineana Todd-Whitehead 300265377 Why is Socioeconomic Inequality so High in Latin America? GEOG212 Why is Socioeconomic Inequality so High in Latin America? Introduction One of the most prominent features of Latin American countries is their collective characteristic of extensive and pervasive socioeconomic inequality (Huber 2009). Latin America has been described as the most unequal region of the world (Gasparini & Lustig 2011). Inequality
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relations between the United States and Latin America in terms of culture. It helped change music in the form of blending different techniques used by different cultures and establish respect of one another. In the 19th century‚ the music in the US was transitioning from the Victorian era of music to ragtime. The significance of this transition was that the US was developing a form of musical style independent of its neighbors across the Atlantic. Latin America had contributed to the development of
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