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  1. Only showing results from link.springer.com

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  2. link.springer.com

    Paramaribo, Suriname Brief Outline of the History and Demographics of Suriname Suriname is situated on the north coast of South America. It borders on French Guyana to the east, Guyana to the west, and Brazil to the south. The country's surface area is slightly less than 165,000 km2. This makes it the smallest indepen-dent state in South America.
  3. link.springer.com

    It borders on French Guyana to the east, Guyana to the west, and Brazil to the south. The country's surface area is slightly less than 165,000 km 2. This makes it the smallest independent state in South America. According to the 2012 census, Suriname has 541,638 inhabitants, of whom 369,146 live within a 30 km radius around the capital of ...
  4. link.springer.com

    The culture of domination then permeated and still permeates all aspects of society. It is rooted in Suriname's colonial history of subordina-tion and the profound social cleavages based on ethnicity, class, and gen-der. In the words of sociologist Nigel Bolland (2001: 11), in the Caribbean
  5. link.springer.com

    In this context three important things happened: (1) the inclusion of Guyana and Suriname into South American regional cooperation was initiated, (2) the IIRSA was created, and (3) the convergence of Mercosur and CAN was promoted (Sanahuja 2012, 35). The new South American project was in no way perceived as contradictory to the existing ones ...
    Author:Anne Marie HoffmannPublished:2019
  6. link.springer.com

    Despite its modest size, the republic of Suriname is today the site of many distinctive processes of globalization. This intersectional study teases out the complex relationships among class, gender, and ethnic identity over the course of Suriname's modern history, from the capital city of Paramaribo to the country's resource-rich rainforest.
  7. link.springer.com

    Suriname is a country in South America with a culture that has more affinity with its Caribbean neighbors than much of South America. Due to the policies of its former Dutch colonial masters, it has one of the most diverse religious landscapes in the Caribbean and South America. The five major world religions are represented there.
  8. link.springer.com

    There is no accurate data on indigenous and maroon people living in their tribal areas. Ellen-Rose Kambel, Indigenous Peoples and Maroons in Suriname (Washington, DC: Inter-American Development Bank, August 2006), 10-11. Google Scholar Ellen-Rose Kambel, "Resource Conflicts, Gender and Indigenous Rights in Suriname.
  9. link.springer.com

    Sep 12, 2024While making use of this theoretical framework, Algoe studies the developments in the religious worlds of Suriname and Guyana. One of her most striking observations is that the percentage of Christians increased in Guyana between 1950 and 2014 because of the growth of the Evangelical Christians at the expense of the traditional mainline Christian groups (Anglicans, Methodists and Presbyterians ...
  10. link.springer.com

    This small, ethnically plural society was torn by severe political conflict. Elections in November 1973 had brought an end to political collaboration between Creoles and Hindustanis, the country's two largest ethnic groups; and the Creoles, now in control of the government, were resolutely pushing (over Hindustani opposition) to sever their ...
  11. link.springer.com

    The West Suriname Project (1970s) The West Suriname Project also entailed the construction of a hydroelectric dam and bauxite mining which would be centered on a new city (Apura). When bauxite prices dropped and a military regime took over in the 1980s, the West Suriname project was shelved. The plans are currently back on the agenda
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