Desigualdad y racismo. Demografía y sociedad en Cuba a fines de la época colonial
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3989/revindias.1998.i212.763Abstract
The author discusses the demographic structure and nature of Cuban society in the late 19th-century on the basis of the census of 1899. He argues that the strongly marked social differentiation in Cuba at the time, the duality in its social order of whites v. blacks, was grounded in the prevailing economic structure of the island and ultimately in the plantation economy. This situation conditioned the integration of the black population in Cuba's civil society in the first years of the new republic.
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