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The young colonials: a social history of education in Trinidad and Tobago, 1834-1939 (University of West Indies Press, 1996). De Lisle, Jerome, Harrilal Seecharan, and Aya Taliba Ayodike. "Is the Trinidad and Tobago education system structured to facilitate optimum human capital development? New findings on the relationship between education ...
Indians first arrived in Trinidad and Tobago as indentured laborers from India through the Indian indenture system from 1845 till 1917, and some Indians and other South Asians, along with their families, later came as entrepreneurs, businesspeople, religious leaders, doctors, engineers, and other professional occupations beginning in the mid ...
Category: Social issues in Trinidad and Tobago. ... View history; General ... Social movements in Trinidad and Tobago (1 C) W.
Stark's Guide-Book and History of Trinidad including Tobago, Granada, and St. Vincent; also a trip up the Orinoco and a description of the great Venezuelan Pitch Lake. Boston: James H. Stark, publisher; London: Sampson Low, Marston & Company. Williams, Eric. 1964. History of the People of Trinidad and Tobago, Andre Deutsch, London.
Social unrest has shaped the development of Trinidad and Tobago since the middle of the 19th century. Attempts by the British colonial government to crack down on the celebration of Carnival sparked the Canboulay Riots in 1881 and 1884.
Pages in category "Social history of Trinidad and Tobago" This category contains only the following page. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
The Hosay massacre (also known as the Hosay riots or the Jahaji massacre) took place on 30 October 1884 in San Fernando, Trinidad when the British colonial authorities fired on participants in the annual Hosay procession (the local name for the Shi'a Festival of Muharram) who had been banned from entering the town.
Mohammed has a 1976 bachelor's degree in economics and sociology and a 1987 master's degree in sociology from the University of the West Indies (The UWI). [2]She received her Ph.D. from the Institute of Social Studies in 1993; her doctoral thesis was entitled A Social History of Post-Migrant Indians in Trinidad, 1917–1947: A Gender Perspective.