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Class alliances and the liberal authoritarian state : the roots of post-colonial democracy in Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, and Surinam / F.S.J. Ledgister.

By: Publication details: Trenton, NJ : Africa World Press, 1998.Description: viii, 216 pages ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0865435464
  • 9780865435469
  • 0865435472
  • 9780865435476
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Class alliances and the liberal authoritarian state.; Class alliances and the liberal authoritarian state.DDC classification:
  • 320.9729 21
LOC classification:
  • JL639.A15 L43 1998
Other classification:
  • 15.85
  • 89.35
Contents:
Ch. I. Democracy in the Post-Colonial World -- Ch. II. Colonial Rule and Decolonization -- Ch. III. Jamaica: Institutionalizing a Two-Party System -- Ch. IV. Trinidad and Tobago: A Dominant Party System -- Ch. V. Surinam: Consociationalism and Democratic Revival -- Ch. VI. Decolonized Democracy in the Caribbean -- Appendix. Political Parties in Jamaica, Trinidad, and Surinam.
Summary: The political evolution of three former colonies into independence and beyond is studied via an examination of the existing literature and through interviews with journalists, scholars and politicians. These countries appear to uphold the conventional wisdom, since Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago have been continuously democratic since independence, while Surinam has not. It is clear from the author's research that the similarities in the political evolution of these countries far outweigh the differences. In particular, the British in Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago, and the Dutch in Surinam, developed similar state structures - simultaneously liberal and authoritarian.Summary: However, in two countries, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago, the emergence of political parties was linked to labor protests, while this linkage, though not the protest, was absent in Surinam. Democratic politics in the former two countries turns out to rest on a two way alliance between the middle and lower classes, embedded in a paternalistic state structure inherited from the colonial period. In Surinam, the absence of this alliance rendered democracy more vulnerable. The author concludes that while the peoples of the Caribbean did not fight long struggles for independence, they have been able to preserve the least poisoned gift of the colonizer - democracy.
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Books Books OCLC Data Available 0000000008252

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Ch. I. Democracy in the Post-Colonial World -- Ch. II. Colonial Rule and Decolonization -- Ch. III. Jamaica: Institutionalizing a Two-Party System -- Ch. IV. Trinidad and Tobago: A Dominant Party System -- Ch. V. Surinam: Consociationalism and Democratic Revival -- Ch. VI. Decolonized Democracy in the Caribbean -- Appendix. Political Parties in Jamaica, Trinidad, and Surinam.

The political evolution of three former colonies into independence and beyond is studied via an examination of the existing literature and through interviews with journalists, scholars and politicians. These countries appear to uphold the conventional wisdom, since Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago have been continuously democratic since independence, while Surinam has not. It is clear from the author's research that the similarities in the political evolution of these countries far outweigh the differences. In particular, the British in Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago, and the Dutch in Surinam, developed similar state structures - simultaneously liberal and authoritarian.

However, in two countries, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago, the emergence of political parties was linked to labor protests, while this linkage, though not the protest, was absent in Surinam. Democratic politics in the former two countries turns out to rest on a two way alliance between the middle and lower classes, embedded in a paternalistic state structure inherited from the colonial period. In Surinam, the absence of this alliance rendered democracy more vulnerable. The author concludes that while the peoples of the Caribbean did not fight long struggles for independence, they have been able to preserve the least poisoned gift of the colonizer - democracy.

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