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89  Articles
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This paper tests the cross-sectional income convergence in historical African ethnic homelands proxied by per capita CO2 emissions between 1850 and 2005 using both parametric and non parametric tests of cross-sectional income distribution modality. We rep... see more

The former homelands and tribal authorities have large populations and high densities with low levels of economic activity and low employment. Population growth in these settlements is in contrast to expectations of population declines, due to urban migra... see more

Allen Eaton’s Arts and Crafts of the Homelands exhibition premiered in Buffalo, New York in 1919, where it drew record crowds to the Albright Gallery. Iterations of the display soon opened in Albany, Rochester, and then in several other cities across the ... see more

The Chronotope of Exile in the Post-Yugoslav Novel and the Boundaries of Imaginary HomelandsAlthough the chronotopic approach to the novels of exile is almost self-explanatory, certain specifics expressed by post-Yugoslav exile narrations evoke a separate... see more

People in the former homelands waged a successful battle against the imposition of 'tribal levies' during the anti-apartheid struggle. Recently, however, there has been a resurgence of traditional authorities demanding annual levies. Those who refuse to p... see more

In 1985, under the title "The Location of Brazil" Salman Rushdie published a long review of Terry Gilliam's film Brazil, which today is to be found in his collection Imaginary Homelands. My essay shows how Rushdie's article can be considered a sort of man... see more

The word ‘diasporic’ means a dispersed mass of people who originally belong to different topographical origins. In ancient times the term diaspora had been associated with the dispersal of a large number of population from their original homelands particu... see more

Diaspora refers to the expression of one’s feeling of being an outsider or alien in some other, the feeling which keeps on popping up repeatedly in front of them. The diasporic people were migrants, slaves, transported convicts, labourers etc. The reason ... see more

Twenty-five years after Namibia gained its independence, the country continues to be characterized by a dualistic land tenure structure, this despite subsequent govern-ments’ ambitious programmes of land reform. Communal land tenure, however, has two side... see more

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