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Cambodia SOCIAL STRUCTURE AND ORGANIZATION
https://photius.com/countries/cambodia/society/cambodia_society_social_structure_and~2.html
Sources: The Library of Congress Country Studies; CIA World Factbook
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    [JPEG]

    Riverine village and fishermen
    Courtesy Bill Herod

    [JPEG]

    Rural women and children, ca. 1958
    Courtesy National Archives

    Figure 7. Ethno-Linguistic Groups of Cambodia, 1983

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    An oxcart driver wears the checkered scarf that distinguishes Cambodians from their Thai or Vietnamese neighbors.
    Courtesy Bill Herod

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    Mother and child symbolize a renascent nation.
    Courtesy Bill Herod

    The ethnic groups that constitute Cambodian society possess a number of economic and demographic commonalities--for example, Chinese merchants play middlemen in many economic cycles, but they also preserve differences in their social and cultural institutions. The major differences among these groups lie in social organization, language, and religion. The majority of the inhabitants of Cambodia are settled in fairly permanent villages near the major bodies of water in the Tonle Sap Basin-Mekong Lowlands region. The contemporary locations of major Khmer population centers date back to antiquity according to geographer Jacques Nepote. He points out that contemporary Khmer Krom (see Appendix B) settlements are located in the same areas as the ancient site of Funan, and that the Khmer settlements extending from Phnom Penh in a southeastern direction are located where pre-Angkorian archaeological sites are clustered (see Prehistory and Early Kingdoms, ch. 1). The Khmer Loeu live in widely scattered villages that are abandoned when the cultivated land in the vicinity is exhausted.

    The permanently settled Khmer and Cham villages usually are located on or near the banks of a river or other bodies of water. Cham villages usually are made up almost entirely of Cham, but Khmer villages, especially in central and in southeastern Cambodia, typically include sizable Chinese communities. In his study of the coastal Chinese in Kampot Province and in Kaoh Kong Province, French geographer Roland Pourtier points out that the Chinese dwellings and shops--usually in the same structures--are located at the center of the town or village, while the Khmer houses are scattered at some distance from the center. He also finds that there are some villages made up almost entirely of Chinese.

    Data as of December 1987


    NOTE: The information regarding Cambodia on this page is re-published from The Library of Congress Country Studies and the CIA World Factbook. No claims are made regarding the accuracy of Cambodia SOCIAL STRUCTURE AND ORGANIZATION information contained here. All suggestions for corrections of any errors about Cambodia SOCIAL STRUCTURE AND ORGANIZATION should be addressed to the Library of Congress and the CIA.

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Revised 24-Mar-05
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