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  2. Donald J. Harris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_J._Harris

    Donald J. Harris. Donald Jasper Harris, OM (born August 23, 1938) is a Jamaican-American economist and emeritus professor at Stanford University, known for applying post-Keynesian ideas to development economics. [ 1 ] He was the first Black scholar granted tenure in the Stanford Department of Economics, and he is the father of Kamala Harris ...

  3. Afro-Jamaicans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afro-Jamaicans

    Afro-Jamaicans are Jamaicans of predominantly African descent. They represent the largest ethnic group in the country. [ 2 ] The ethnogenesis of the Black Jamaican people stemmed from the Atlantic slave trade of the 16th century, when enslaved Africans were transported as slaves to Jamaica and other parts of the Americas. [ 3 ]

  4. Jamaicans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamaicans

    Jamaicans are the citizens of Jamaica and their descendants in the Jamaican diaspora. The vast majority of Jamaicans are of Sub-Saharan African descent, with minorities of Europeans, Indians, Chinese, Middle Eastern, and others of mixed ancestry. The bulk of the Jamaican diaspora resides in other Anglophone countries, namely Canada, the United ...

  5. Asante people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asante_people

    According to BioMed Central (BMC biology) in 2012, the average Jamaican has 60% of Asante matrilineal DNA and, today Asante is the only ethnic group by name known to contemporary Jamaicans. [42] Famous Jamaican individuals such as: Marcus Garvey and his first wife, Amy Ashwood Garvey , are of Asante descent.

  6. History of Jamaica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Jamaica

    Bustamante had political ambitions of his own, however. In 1942, while still incarcerated, he founded a political party to rival the PNP, called the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP). The new party, whose leaders were of a lower class than those of the PNP, was supported by conservative businessmen and 60,000 dues-paying BITU members, who encompassed ...

  7. Nanny of the Maroons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanny_of_the_Maroons

    Queen Nanny, Granny Nanny, or Nanny of the Maroons ONH (c. 1686 – c. 1760), was an early-18th-century freedom fighter and leader of the Jamaican Maroons. She led a community of formerly-enslaved escapee slaves, the majority of them West African in descent, called the Windward Maroons, along with their children and families. [ 1 ]

  8. Jamaican Maroons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamaican_Maroons

    Coromantee, Jamaicans of African descent, Sierra Leone Creoles, Maroon people. Jamaican Maroons descend from Africans who freed themselves from slavery in the Colony of Jamaica and established communities of free black people in the island's mountainous interior, primarily in the eastern parishes. Africans who were enslaved during Spanish rule ...

  9. Free black people in Jamaica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_black_people_in_Jamaica

    Portrait of Francis Williams, artist unknown, oil on canvas, circa 1745. One of the leading free people of colour in early Jamaica was Francis Williams, who was a scholar and poet born in Kingston, Jamaica, and who travelled to Europe and became a citizen of Britain. In the 1720s, he returned to Jamaica, where he set up a free school for black ...