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3 produkter
3 produkter
United States and the Development of the Puerto Rican Status Question, 1936-1968
Häftad, Engelska, 2021
405 kr
Skickas inom 10-15 vardagar
This study traces the evolution of political status in Puerto Rico from 1936 to 1968, with special emphasis on the events that led to the creation of the Commonwealth in 1952. No other work published in English has dealt with the Puerto Rican status question in such detail.The central problem in the status debate has been: how to strike a happy balance between Puerto Rico’s economic needs, which could be filled through uninterrupted association with the United States, and the cultural divergence between the mainland and the island. Bringing together new and significant information drawn from government records and personal papers of U.S. officials, this book will be of interest to all serious students of Puerto Rican affairs, as well as to U.S. and Puerto Rican government and political leaders.
156 kr
Skickas inom 7-10 vardagar
Founded by MK Gandhi early in his career, the Natal Indian Congress is one of the oldest political organizations in South Africa. This book traces its course through colonial anti-Asiatic feeling, past apartheid, and into the new democracy.
752 kr
Skickas inom 7-10 vardagar
The religious and cultural orientation of South African Indians was influenced Mohandas K. Gandhi, and this study is the first to explore its relevance to his moral, philosophical, and political growth. Gandhi and his compatriots developed 'Indianness' in transnational politics, and used it as a lever to win imperial protection against discriminating practices in colonial South Africa. This linked South Africa to the British Raj in India.In working closely with his compatriots, Gandhi operated within the cultural and religious parameters set by them, and creatively redefined them. In India, he would expand on the ideas and strategies he developed back in South Africa.While useful in an imperial setting, 'Indianness' became embedded in the system of White rule at the turn of the twentieth century. Moreover, the emerging political economy in Natal produced sharp competition and conflict, as Africans, Indians, and Whites came into contact in agriculture, industry, commerce, and other services. Racial antipathies simultaneously grew. As subordinate groups, Indians and Africans both developed stereotypes of each other as a way of identifying themselves more sharply to stress differences. While Gandhi was sensitive to the legitimate political aspirations of Africans, he did not feel the need to spell out how Indians should relate to them because India was at the centre of his thinking. Gandhi's legacy inspired succeeding generations of South African activists. It connects him to Nelson Mandela, who led South Africa to freedom and democracy in the last decade of the twentieth century, yet some have questioned his legacy. This study offers perspectives that more accurately situate Gandhi's role in South Africa's history.