The region was densely populated, with about 150 people per square kilometer in the late 1990s. Contributing factors for the close grouping of the rural settlements there include the abundance of hills and springs, but especially the close-knit social organization of the inhabitants. A clear marker of the Sunni Muslim identity of the area are the plethora of
mosques across the landscape, a distinction from the predominantly Alawite countryside of the Jabal Ansariya. Jabal al-Akrad administratively corresponds with the nahiya of
Kinsabba and the northern area of the nahiya of
Slinfeh, both subordinate to the
al-Haffah District of the
Latakia Governorate, as well as part of
Bidama and
Jisr al-Shughur nahiyas of the
Idlib Governorate. Kinsabba historically was a mostly
Greek Orthodox Christian village (one of the few Christian communities in Jabal al-Akrad), though Muslims accounted for about four-fifths of the population by 1994, up from one-third in the 1935 census. The population of the village was about 500 in 2004 and its subdistrict over 17,000 between 35 settlements. The largest settlement in Jabal al-Akrad is the small town of
Salma, which had a population of about 2,100 in the 2004 census. It also serves as a summer resort and due to the community's conservative Muslim character, it generally caters to conservative Muslim families from Latakia and Aleppo. Summer resorting began to proliferate in Jabal al-Akrad, such as to the villages of
Uwainat and
Ghanimiyeh, with the spread of public services to most of the area's villages in the 1980s and the high volume of tourism in Salma. ==Syrian civil war==