Examines donor's behavior and factors influencing donation, focusing on economic and financial aspects, social beliefs, and preferences; based on data from 336 people between 18-70 years of age, representing three ethnic groups (White, Asian, and African-Caribbean) mainly in three areas of Greater London; Great Britain.
Examines experience of Caribbean migrants and immigrants in urban regions in Spain, France, the Netherlands, Great Britain, and the US; 7 articles, 2 in Spanish, 1 in French, and 4 in English. Based on an international conference entitled Les migrations caraïbéennes vers les métropoles: identité, citoyenneté, modèles d'intégration, held on June 20-22, 2002 in Paris. Contents: La racialización en los migrantes coloniales del Caribe en los centros metropolitanos: una introducción a la historia de las diversas colonialidades en cada imperio, by Ramón Grosfoguel; Incorporation and transnationalism among Dominican immigrants, by José Itzigsohn; Caribbean kinship in a global setting, by Mary Chamberlain; The Janus face of transnational citizenship: Surinamese experiences, by Ruben Gowricharn; Gender issues in the study of circulation between the Caribbean and the French Metropole, by Stephanie Condon; Racisme colonial, ethnicité et citoyenneté: les leçons des expériences migratoires antillaises et guyanaises, by Michel Giraud; Identidad, ciudadanía e integración de los dominicanos en España: un estudio exploratorio, by Carlos Dore Cabral, Laura Faxas.
Caribbean lIterary production is being redefined in the wake of recent cahanges in the larger publishing houses that have traditionally published Caribbean literature. Macmillan Caribbean Writers, Launched in 2003 at the Calabash Literary festival in Jamaica, has opened its series with an impressive list of plubblications including new editions of Caribbean fiction from established writers, the Caribbean Classics series, which includes unplublished fiction and autobiograph7y from the nineteeth and early twentieth century, and new writting from as yet unplublished writers. Other very small Caribbean publishers such as Arawak and Twin Guinep continue to plublish reference works and some literary criticism, and the plublications lists of the University of the West Indies Press continues to grow; Introduction to Caribbean literary production.