CARIBBEAN EXAMINATIONS COUNCIL CARIBBEAN ADVANCED PROFICIENCY EXAMINATION (CAPE) CARIBBEAN STUDIES For Self-Study and Distance Learning This material has been developed for The Caribbean Examinations Council (CXC) With assistance from The Commonwealth of Learning (COL) Copyright © 2004 CXC/COL Prepared by Dr Jennifer Mohammed Mr. Samuel Lochan Dr. Henderson Carter Dr. David Browne CARIBBEAN STUDIES TABLE OF CONTENTS Study Guide Titles Pages 1. Society‚
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of the family; | The functions of the family in contemporary Caribbean society:(a) As a unit of procreation(b) As a social unit for rearing children‚ namely‚ the socialization of the individual; (c) As a economic unit for satisfying basic needs; (d) As a social unit for satisfying emotional and psychological needs. | | 3. | Compare different family types and unions in the Caribbean; | Difference in family types and unions in the Caribbean:Types
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the Caribbean. (25marks) The various family forms present in the Caribbean can be attributed to a long and specifically Caribbean history dating back to the slavery and indentureship periods and beyond to the cultural heritages of Africa‚ Europe‚ India and elsewhere. Three of these family forms are the family based on common law unions‚ the matrifocal family and the extended family. Some theorists such as Melville Herskovits (1958) attribute the prevalence of certain types of Caribbean family
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The legal system of the United States of America is very similar‚ almost to the point of being identical‚ to the legal system of the English-speaking Caribbean.”Discuss. The legal system of the United States of America and the English speaking Caribbean are predominantly common law legal systems. Both legal systems share a number of similarities; however‚ there are quite a number of pronounced differences that would make it impossible for one to conclude that both systems are similar to the point
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MY HISTORY SCHOOL BASED ASSESMENT (S.B.A) THEME: RESISTANCE AND REVOLT What were the consequences of the Haitian Revolution on Haiti and the wider Caribbean? [pic] By Registration Number: Center Number: Topic: Resistance and Revolt What were the consequences of the Haitian Revolution on Haiti and the wider Caribbean? [pic] By Registration Number: Center Number: Topic: Resistance and Revolt Table of Content
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influenced in this novel are apparent racial tensions and social cues inside the social hierarchy of the village itself. There are clear indications of social hierarchy levels that cause the most tension within one race‚ the blacks born and living in the Caribbean. “The villagers were a low down nigger people who couldn’t bear to see one of their kind get along without feeling envy and hate” (Lamming 26). A clear dichotomy between the regular villagers and the overseers who are both the same race yet there
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IN THE CARIBBEAN CLASSROOM Teaching English language and literacy to students is one of the major tasks faced by many teachers in the Caribbean today. When we consider the language varieties that are spoken in our classrooms‚ we can see why we have so many issues when it comes to the teaching of Standard English. It is often said that language is a powerful tool which influences beliefs and views and acts as a complete tool of social control. When we look at our schools in the Caribbean today
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year or more. In 1838‚ indentured labor was introduced to the Caribbean as result of the lack labor in the plantation fields. Most indentured laborers brought to the Caribbean were from India‚ Asia‚ Africa and Europe. Liberated Africans were also sent to the West Indies at the expense of the government. Most of these workers signed contracts voluntarily‚ but were under the control of the plantation owners once they arrived in the Caribbean. Indenture-ship had the greatest impact in Trinidad and Guyana
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CARIBBEAN EXAMINATIONS COUNCIL Caribbean Advanced Proficiency Examination® CAPE® SOCIOLOGY SYLLABUS Effective for examinations from May–June 2014 CXC A27/U2/13 Published by the Caribbean Examinations Council All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced‚ stored in a retrieval system‚ or transmitted in any form‚ or by any means electronic‚ photocopying‚ recording or otherwise without prior permission of the author or publisher. Correspondence related to the syllabus
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well as in Latin America and the Caribbean. North American and Latin American and Caribbean racial ideologies were similar in that they both utilized slaves and they treated the native peoples brutally. These societies also differed in that Latin American and Caribbean colonists often intermarried with indigenous women‚ while the North American colonists often set themselves apart‚ and they differ in that in the native empires in Latin American and the Caribbean were destroyed while in North America
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