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Sri Lankan Culture

References

Author
ÐßÐßÊÓÆµ,

All research and editorial content is developed and curated by ÐßÐßÊÓÆµ. Read about our process.

The primary author of this profile was Chara Scroope (2016).


  • Arasaratnam, S., & Peiris, G. H. (2016). Sri Lanka. Encyclopaedia Britannica.
  • Australian Bureau of Statistics. (2021a). 4-digit level ANCP Ancestry Multi Response by Australia (UR) (2021 Census of Population and Housing) [Data set]. ABS Census TableBuilder.
  • Australian Bureau of Statistics. (2021b). People in Australia who were born in Sri Lanka [Data set]. 2021 Census Country of Birth QuickStats.
  • Barlas, R., & Wanasundera, N. (2012). CultureShock! Sri Lanka. Marshall Cavendish Editions.
  • Central Intelligence Agency. (2024). Sri Lanka. The World Factbook.
  • Chapin, B. L., & Silva, K. T. (2001). Sri Lanka. In M. Ember & C. R. Ember (Eds.), Countries and Their Cultures: Saint Kitts and Nevis to Zimbabwe (Vol. 4, pp. 2086–2099). Macmillan Reference USA; Advameg.
  • Chatterji, J., & Washbrook, D. (Eds.). (2013). Routledge Handbook of the South Asian Diaspora. Taylor & Francis Group.
  • Commisceo Global Consulting. (2016). Guide to Sri Lankan Culture, Etiquette and Business Practices. COMMISCEO Global.
  • Culture Crossing Guide. (2014). Sri Lanka.
  • Culture Factor Group. (2023). Country comparison tool: Sri Lanka.
  • Deegalle, M. (2017). Contemporary Sri Lankan Buddhist Traditions. In M. Jerryson (Ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Contemporary Buddhism (pp. 13–35). Oxford University Press.
  • Department of Home Affairs. (2018). Sri Lanka-born: Community Information Summary. Commonwealth of Australia.
  • Dissanayake, L., & Hugo, G. (2014). The Process of Sri Lankan Migration to Australia Focussing on Irregular Migrants Seeking Asylum (Irregular Migration Research Programme). Australian Government.
  • Dresser, N. (1996). Multicultural Manners: New Rules of Etiquette for a Changing Society. J. Wiley & Sons.
  • Khalidi, S., McIlroy, F., & Neumayer, H. (2012). The Cultural Dictionary and Directory (3rd ed.). Migrant and Refugee Settlement Services of the ACT Inc.
  • Lewis, R. D. (2006). When Cultures Collide: Leading Across Cultures (3rd ed.). Nicholas Brealey Publishing.
  • Migrant Information Centre. (2010). Sri Lankan Cultural Profile. Migrant Information Centre.
  • Migrant Information Centre (Eastern Melbourne). (2022). Sri Lankan Cultural Profile 2022 [Fact sheet].
  • Minority Rights Group. (2018). Sri Lanka. Minority Rights Group.
  • Museums Victoria. (2017). Immigration History from Sri Lanka to Victoria. Museums Victoria.
  • ProQuest. (2017). Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka. ProQuest & Brigham Young University.
  • Ramanathapillai, R., & Younger, P. (2018). Sri Lanka. In K. A. Jacobsen, H. Basu, A. Malinar, & V. Narayanan (Eds.), Brill’s Encyclopedia of Hinduism Online. Brill.
  • Ross, R. R., Savada, A. M., & Nyrop, R. F. (1990). Sri Lanka: A Country Study (2nd ed). Federal Research Division, Library of Congress.
  • Samuels, J. (2007). Buddhism and Caste in India and Sri Lanka. Religion Compass, 1(1), 120–130.
  • Schalk, P. (2020). Religion and society in Sri Lanka. In Routledge Handbook of South Asian Religions (pp. 315–344). Routledge.
  • Transparency International. (2024). Corruption Perceptions Index 2023.
  • United Kingdom Government. (2006). A Guide to Names and Naming Practices.
  • Vassiley, G. (2009). Cultural Briefing on the Sri Lankan Community. Fremantle Multicultural Centre Inc.
  • Weiberg-Salzmann, M. (2014). The Radicalisation of Buddhism in the Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries: The Buddhist Sangha in Sri Lanka. Politics, Religion & Ideology, 15(2), 283–307.

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