Cape Verdeans in the Netherlands

Summary

Cape Verdeans in the Netherlands consist of migrants from Cape Verde to the Netherlands and their descendants. As of 2022, figures from Statistics Netherlands showed 23,150 people of Cape Verdean origin in the Netherlands (people from Cape Verde, or those with a parent from there).[2]

Cape Verdeans in the Netherlands
Total population
23,150 (2022)
Regions with significant populations
Rotterdam
Languages
Cape Verdean Creole, Dutch, Portuguese
Religion
Catholicism, minority Jehovah's Witnesses[1]

Migration history edit

Early migration from Cape Verde to the Netherlands began in the 1960s and 1970s. The migrants consisted primarily of young men who had signed on as sailors on Dutch ships, and as such they concentrated primarily in the port city of Rotterdam, especially the Heemraadsplein area. Prior to independence in 1975, Cape Verdean immigrants were registered as Portuguese immigrants from the overseas province of Portuguese Cape Verde. Another wave of migration began in 1975, following the independence of Cape Verde from Portugal; this new wave of migrants comprised primarily teachers, soldiers, and other lower officials of the former government. There was an immigration amnesty for Cape Verdean migrants in 1976.[3]

From 1996 to 2010, the number of Cape Verdeans in the Netherlands recorded by Statistics Netherlands grew by roughly 25% from a base of 16,662 people; about three-quarters of the growth in that period was in the 2nd-generation category (people born in the Netherlands to one or two migrant parents from Cape Verde).[4]

As of today, Cape Verdeans are part of the wider Portuguese-speaking community in the Netherlands, comprising around 35,000 people from PALOP countries (the overwhelming majority being from Angola or from Cape Verde), Timor-Leste or Macau,[5] 65,000 Brazilians[6] and 35,600 Portuguese.[7]

Distribution edit

Approximately 90% live in the Rotterdam metropolitan area.[8] In Rotterdam, the largest concentration live in Delfshaven, where they make up about 8.8% of the borough's population.[9] The city has more than 60 Cape Verdean civil organisations.[10] Smaller groups can be found in other cities such as Schiedam, Amsterdam, Zaanstad, and Delfzijl.[11]

Employment and business edit

Cape Verdeans generally have better labour market outcomes than other migrant groups like Turks or Moroccans, similar to those of Surinamese, but worse than those of natives.[12] The various Cape Verdean-run hair salons of Rotterdam often serve as gathering points for the women of the community.[13] Other common ethnic business niches include transport businesses and travel agencies.[13] The Cape Verdeans are also renown in the music industry and currently developing within the contemporary fine arts.

Notable people edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Barajas 2003, p. 24
  2. ^ "CBS Statline". opendata.cbs.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 2023-07-18.
  3. ^ Choenni 2004, p. 13
  4. ^ CBS 2010
  5. ^ "CBS Statline". opendata.cbs.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 2023-07-21.
  6. ^ "Brasileiros no exterior" (PDF).
  7. ^ "Observatório da Emigração". observatorioemigracao.pt (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2023-07-14.
  8. ^ Marc-Montclos 2008
  9. ^ Barajas 2003, p. 18
  10. ^ Choenni 2004, p. 39
  11. ^ Choenni 2004, p. 47
  12. ^ Choenni 2004, p. 29
  13. ^ a b Barajas 2003, p. 23

Sources edit

  • Barajas, Diego, ed. (2003), "Archipelagos of Cape Verde in Rotterdam: Dispersed Nation", Dispersion: a study of a global mobility and the dynamics of a fictional urbanism, Episode Publishers, ISBN 978-90-5973-002-1
  • Choenni, Chan (May 2004), Kaapverdianen in Nederland: een profiel/Cape Verdeans in the Netherlands: a profile (PDF), The Hague, Netherlands: Ministry of Justice, retrieved 2009-09-25
  • Marc-Montclos, Antoine Pérouse de (2008), "Chapter 2: The Political Value of Remittances: Cape Verde, Comores, and Lesotho", Diasporas, Remittances and Africa South of the Sahara - A Strategic Assessment, Institute for Security Studies, archived from the original on 2008-02-29, retrieved 2009-08-26
  • Population by origin and generation, 1 January, The Hague: Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek, 2010-03-15, retrieved 2011-01-20

Further reading edit

  • Mertens, P. L. J. M.; v.d. Avoort, H. G. A. M.; Widdowson, M. A.; Sturmans, F. (2003), "Geen circulatie van poliovirus in Rotterdamse Kaapverdische gemeenschap aangetoond tijdens de polio-epidemie in Kaapverdië in 2000", Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Geneeskunde, 147 (48): 2401–2
  • Rodrigues Pires, Dóris Teresa Duarte (2006), Nha tambor: onderzoek naar het cultureel erfgoed van Kaapverdianen in Rotterdam/Uma investigação sobre a herança cultural dos cabo-verdeanos em Roterdão/Investigation of the cultural heritage of Cape Verdeans in Rotterdam, Rotterdam: Stichting Avanço, OCLC 320571424
  • de Freitas, C. (2005), "Health has no Borders: Cape Verdean Immigrants in the Netherlands and the Transnational Quest for Health Care Across Europe", International Journal of Migration, Health, and Social Care, 1 (1): 19–36
  • Carling, Jørgen (2008), "Cape Verdeans in the Netherlands", in Carling, Jørgen; Batalha, Luís (eds.), Transnational Archipelago: Perspectives on Cape Verdean Migration and Diaspora, Amsterdam University Press, pp. 91–112, ISBN 978-90-5356-994-8
  • de Freitas, Claudia (2008), "Do silêncio à participação: cabo-verdianos e saúde mental na Holanda/From silence to participation: Cape Verdeans and mental health in the Netherlands", in Góis, P. (ed.), Comunidade(s) cabo-verdiana(s): as múltiplas faces da imigração cabo-verdiana (PDF), Lisbon: Observatório da Imigração/Alto Comissariado para a Imigração e Diálogo Intercultural, pp. 207–228, ISBN 978-989-8000-71-2, archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-09-26

External links edit

  • Embassy of Cape Verde in the Netherlands
  • Migration and Major Cities Policy in Rotterdam Archived 2012-03-01 at the Wayback Machine
  • Gemeente Rotterdam