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  2. Casta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casta

    Pilar Gonzalbo, in her study La trampa de las castas (2013) discards the idea of the existence of a "caste system" or a "caste society" in New Spain, understood as a "social organization based on the race and supported by coercive power". [14]

  3. Untouchability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Untouchability

    Due to many caste-based discriminations in Nepal, the government of Nepal legally abolished the caste-system and criminalized any caste-based discrimination, including "untouchability," in 1963. [8] Untouchability has been outlawed in India, Nepal and Pakistan. However, "untouchability" has not been legally defined.

  4. Caste system among South Asian Christians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caste_system_among_South...

    Christians have been advocating for the same rights given to Hindu, Buddhist, and Sikh Scheduled castes. [40] Despite the activists' point that Christians are a casteless society, discrimination does not go away easily and Dalits seek equal rights irrespective of the religion they profess. [41]

  5. Caste doesn't just exist in India or in Hinduism – it is ...

    www.aol.com/news/caste-doesnt-just-exist-india...

    Nuns from a group of Dalit Christians, or India's lowest caste who converted to Christianity, protest in New Delhi. AP Photo/Gurinder OsanThe California State University system, America’s ...

  6. Mestizo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mestizo

    The Counts of Miravalle, residing in Andalucía, Spain, demanded in 2003 that the government of Mexico recommence payment of the so-called "Moctezuma pensions" it had cancelled in 1934. The mestizo historian Inca Garcilaso de la Vega , son of Spanish conquistador Sebastián Garcilaso de la Vega and of the Inca princess Isabel Chimpo Oclloun ...

  7. Caste - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caste

    The other castes were similarly further sub-classified by 19th-century and early-20th-century ethnographers based on numerous criteria ranging from profession, endogamy or exogamy or polygamy, and a host of other factors in a manner similar to castas in Spanish colonies such as Mexico, and caste system studies in British colonies such as India.

  8. Castizo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castizo

    On this consideration is based the common estimation of descent from a union of Indian and European or creole Spaniard." [ 7 ] In the early 21st century, the term castizo has also come to mean mixed-race people with light skin, in comparison to mulattos , pardos , cholos , moriscos and coyotes , who would be mixed-race people with darker skin.

  9. National and regional identity in Spain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_and_regional...

    Present-day Spain was formed in the wake of the expansion of the Christian states in northern Spain, a process known as the Reconquista. The Reconquista, ending with the Fall of Granada in 1492, was followed by a contested process of religious and linguistic unification and political centralisation, which began under the Catholic Monarchs and ...