African American Research Center, Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Notes:
422 p., A study of the politics of race, culture and identity among Garinagu in Honduras. Garinagu are a people of African and Amerindian descent deported by the British from St. Vincent to Central America in 1797. Within Honduras, they have been racially interpellated as “black” in contradistinction to the dominant mestizo, understood as the product of the racial-cultural fusion between the European and the Indian. Anthropological studies have failed to substantially investigate the relationship between Garinagu and the mestizo-dominated society and state. They have also neglected the construction of racial-cultural identity among Garinagu themselves.
Agricultural Communications Documentation Center, Funk Library, University of Illinois Box: KerryByrnes2 Document Number: D01195
Notes:
Kerry J. Byrnes Collection, This paper prepared by the Academy for Educational Development under contract number DPE-5826-C-00-5054-00 with the Offices of Education, Rural Development and Agriculture of the Bureau for Science and Technology of the United States Agency for International Development.70 pages. Washington, DC 70 pages., This paper reports on a characterization study of citrus growers in Honduras.