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Article
Ethnic Encounters and Everyday Economics in Kassumba, Guinea-Bissau
Ethnopolitics (2012)
  • Brandon D. Lundy, Kennesaw State University
Abstract

This paper presents evidence of ethnocultural coexistence strategies as a counter-argument to more pessimistic views for inter-ethnic relations. The community under ethnographic investigation is the semi-isolated, southern village of Kassumba, Guinea-Bissau in West Africa. The minority Islamic Nalú claim territorial hegemony while spiritist Balanta immigrants outnumber the Nalú three to one. This paper finds that inter-ethnic cooperation through hospitality, mutually beneficial economic arrangements, and the fashioning of individual- and community-level social bonds are important approaches to making a living in this village. This paper contributes to the ongoing discussions regarding the relationships between cultural identity, livelihood and the politicized organization of space.

Publication Date
2012
Citation Information
Brandon D. Lundy. "Ethnic Encounters and Everyday Economics in Kassumba, Guinea-Bissau" Ethnopolitics Vol. iFirst (2012)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/brandon_lundy/4/