2017
DOI: 10.4000/etnografica.4871
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Beyond Martim Moniz: Portuguese Hindu Gujarati merchants in Lisbon

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 19 publications
(14 reference statements)
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“…Para alguns autores (cf. Ávila & Alves, 1993;Cachado, 2017;Lourenço & Cachado, 2012), há uma centralidade das trading companies de base familiar na organização empresarial indiana. Comparativamente, o financiamento através de grupos étnicos, ou utilizando redes coétnicas internacionais, parece mais comum no caso nepalês.…”
Section: Discussionunclassified
“…Para alguns autores (cf. Ávila & Alves, 1993;Cachado, 2017;Lourenço & Cachado, 2012), há uma centralidade das trading companies de base familiar na organização empresarial indiana. Comparativamente, o financiamento através de grupos étnicos, ou utilizando redes coétnicas internacionais, parece mais comum no caso nepalês.…”
Section: Discussionunclassified
“…According to Fonseca (2009b), this explains that only after the conclusion of the decolonization process in 1975 did Lisbon's inhabitants become aware that they had been living in the capital of a colonial empire. The impact of postcolonial migratory flows on the urban landscape of Lisbon has been studied by several authors, who measured it in terms of aspects such as interethnic conflict (Malheiros and Mendes, 2007), forms of access to housing (Cachado and Frangella, 2019), intraurban mobility patterns (Cachado, 2014), residential ethnicization (Malheiros et al ., 2012; 2013) or the development of commercial enclaves linked to certain migrant groups (Cachado, 2017). Authors such as Pardue (2019) who wrote on racial issues, have referred to the emergence of a new sense of ‘black Lisbon’, which derives directly from the effects of postcolonial migration on the Portuguese capital.…”
Section: Migrant Urbanism and Its Impact On The Built Environmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most diaspora members are products of the employment-based migration route formed when the Portuguese Empire was still functioning in Africa and the Indian subcontinent. It can be said that the majority of diaspora members currently reside in Lisbon [8,9], London and Leicester; however, there are still a significant number of Diuenses who still reside in areas of Mozambique and other parts of the world.…”
Section: Owners Of Heritage Architecture In Diu Townmentioning
confidence: 99%