No. Title Date
1 About the editors/authors
2 About the editors/authors
3 African agency in the emergence of the Atlantic Creoles
4 Arawak versus Lokono, what's in a name?
5 Boiling water, or the process of systematic development of a common understanding
6 Calypso music and the hidden narratives of Aruba
7 Collaborative writing in a 21st century Aruban English classroom
8 La competencia comunicativa intercultural a través del entorna de videocomunicación : ¿Cómo se manifiesta la competencia comunicativa intercultural en el intercambio de contenidos culturales a través del entorno de videocomunicación?
9 Connections between the Eastern Caribbean and the Central American Caribbean Coast: the history and demographics of the Garifuna and other African and Afro-Indigenous descended peoples
10 Conquered by a creole
11 Conscious choice and constructed identities a study of written codeswitching between Crucian and standard English in St. Croix
12 Contents: Crossing shifting boundaries: language and changing political status in Aruba, Bonaire and Curaçao / ed. by Nicholas Faraclas, Ronald Severing, Christa Weijer, Elisabeth Echteld.
13 Crossing shifting boundaries : language and changing political status in Aruba, Bonaire and Curaçao / ed. by Nicholas Faraclas, Ronald Severing, Christa Weijer, Elisabeth Echteld.
14 Designing a Digital Community Repository Infrastructure for the Dutch Caribbean From the Perspective of a Small Island Developing State
15 Gaining perspective on papiamentu: milestones and achievements
16 Hoe kan spelling effectief onderwezen worden in het voortgezet onderwijs op Aruba? : een onderzoek naar spellingonderwijs in de Arubaanse Mavo
17 How to begin healing a long festering wound: Papiamento, community and education in Aruba
18 In a sea of heteroglossia: pluri-lingualism, pluri-culturalism, and pluri-identification in the Caribbean
19 The instituto pedagogico Arubano: What we have already achieved, and what we would like to achieve in the future
20 Language attitudes in Bonaire : attitudes towards Dutch and Papiamentu among students