Yahoo Poland Wyszukiwanie w Internecie

Search results

  1. The Dutch had occupied the Cape Town area of South Africa as early as 1652 in order to provide a victualling station for the Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie (VOC – the Dutch United East India Company) to restock their ships travelling between the Netherlands and their interests in South East Asia.

  2. This article examines the migratory movement from the Netherlands to South Africa and the associated migration policies in both countries over the years 1910 to 1961. Migration acts as a lens through which shifting constructions of national,

  3. This notion is shown in the African People’s Organization basing its standards “to deal with the rights and duties of Coloured people of South Africa as distinguished from the Native races” (Adhikari, 1997, p. 284).

  4. 1 maj 2012 · We examined identity indicators in free self-descriptions of African, Coloured, Indian, and White ethnic groups in South Africa. Based on trait theory, independence-interdependence, and ...

  5. 21 kwi 2017 · One of the major challenges faced by these nations is how to unravel the richness associated with ethnic diversity and to build a national identity inclusive of all people. In this article, we consider the importance of identity and acculturation in (culturally diverse) Africa.

  6. 5 sty 2024 · How the Cape Colony impacted South African demographics today. Today, around 1.27 million people living in South Africa are Asian South Africans (2.5% of the population), mostly people of Indian descent whose ancestors were brought over as workers by the British and Dutch.

  7. 3 sty 2020 · The somewhat ambitious intention of this chapter is to separate ideology from reality by exploring the aims, claims, and practices involved in the development of South Africa’s unique race-based classificatory systems, and the treatment therein of mixed-heritage individuals and groups. The Legacy of Colonization and Imperial Conquest