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    Credit, Identity, and Resilience in the Bahamas and Barbados

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    Author
    Stoffle, Brent W.
    Purcell,Trevor
    Stoffle, Richard W
    Van Vlack, Kathleen
    Arnett, Kendra
    Minnis, Jessica
    Affiliation
    National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
    University of South Florida
    University of Arizona
    College of Bahamas
    Issue Date
    2009-12
    Keywords
    Rotating Credit Association
    Bahamas
    Barbados
    Identity
    Community Resilience
    
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    Collection Information
    This item is part of the Richard Stoffle Collection. It was digitized from a physical copy provided by Richard Stoffle, Bureau of Applied Research in Anthropology, School of Anthropology at the University of Arizona. For more information about items in this collection, please email Special Collections, askspecialcollections@u.library.arizona.edu.
    Publisher
    Ethnology
    Abstract
    People of the Caribbean have maintained social networks that provide security in the face of human and natural perturbations. Rotating savings and credit associations (ROSCAs) constitute one such system, which probably came to much of the Caribbean with African people and persisted through slavery. As a foundation of creole economic systems throughout the Caribbean, ROSCAs are time-tested dimensions of traditional culture and a source of pride and identity. This analysis of the history and contemporary functions of ROSCAs in Barbados and the Bahamas is based on more than a thousand extensive and intensive first-person interviews and surveys. This article argues that ROSCAs continue, much as they did in the past, to provide critical human services, social stability, and a source of African-ancestor identity in these two nations. (Women’s power, rotating credit, Bahamas, Barbados).
    Note
    Included with this article is a presentation produced by Dr. Brent Stoffle to highlight the findings of this paper.
    Collections
    Caribbean: Bahamas Biocomplexity Project

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