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The Lesser Antilles Incuding Trinidad
The brilliant Lesser Antillean Barn Owl again showed superbly. One of several potential splits not yet recognized by the IOC (Pete Morris) THE LESSER ANTILLES INCUDING TRINIDAD 5 – 20/25 JUNE 2015 LEADERS: PETE MORRIS After our successful tour around the Caribbean in 2013, it was great to get back again this year. It all seemed pretty straightforward this time around, and once again we cleaned up on all of the available endemics, po- 1 BirdQuest Tour Report:The Lesser Antilles www.birdquest-tours.com The fabulous White-breasted Thrasher from Martinique (Pete Morris) tential splits and other goodies. For sure, this was no ordinary Caribbean holiday! During the first couple of weeks we visited no fewer than ten islands (Antigua, Barbuda, Montserrat, Dominica, Guadeloupe, Martinique, St Lucia, St Vincent, Barbados and Grenada), a logistical feat of some magnitude. With plenty of LIAT flights (the islanders refer to LIAT as ‘Leave Island any Time’ and ‘Luggage in Another Terminal’ to name but two of the many funny phrases coined from LIAT) and unreliable AVIS car hire reservations, we had our work cut out, but in the end, all worked out! It’s always strange birding on islands with so few targets, but with so many islands to pack-in, we were never really short of things to do. All of the endemics showed well and there were some cracking highlights, including the four smart endemic amazons, the rare Grenada Dove, the superb Lesser Antillean Barn Owl, the unique tremblers and White-breasted Thrashers, and a series of colourful endemic orioles to name just a few! At the end of the Lesser Antilles adventure we enjoyed a few days on Trinidad. -
Perspectives on the Grenada Revolution, 1979-1983
Perspectives on the Grenada Revolution, 1979-1983 Perspectives on the Grenada Revolution, 1979-1983 Edited by Nicole Phillip-Dowe and John Angus Martin Perspectives on the Grenada Revolution, 1979-1983 Edited by Nicole Phillip-Dowe and John Angus Martin This book first published 2017 Cambridge Scholars Publishing Lady Stephenson Library, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 2PA, UK British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Copyright © 2017 by Nicole Phillip-Dowe, John Angus Martin and contributors Book cover design by Hugh Whyte All rights for this book reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. ISBN (10): 1-4438-5178-7 ISBN (13): 978-1-4438-5178-7 CONTENTS Illustrations ................................................................................................ vii Acknowledgments ...................................................................................... ix Abbreviations .............................................................................................. x Introduction ................................................................................................ xi Chapter One ................................................................................................. 1 Citizens and Comrades in Arms: The Congruence of Fédon’s Rebellion and the Grenada -
Grenada Page 1 of 8
2009 Human Rights Report: Grenada Page 1 of 8 Home » Under Secretary for Democracy and Global Affairs » Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor » Releases » Human Rights Reports » 2009 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices » Western Hemisphere » Grenada 2009 Human Rights Report: Grenada BUREAU OF DEMOCRACY, HUMAN RIGHTS, AND LABOR 2009 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices March 11, 2010 Grenada is a parliamentary democracy with a bicameral legislature. Grenada and two smaller islands, Carriacou and Petite Martinique, have a population of approximately 105,000. In generally free and fair elections in July 2008, the National Democratic Congress (NDC) won 11 of 15 seats in Parliament, and Tillman Thomas was sworn in as prime minister. Civilian authorities generally maintained effective control of the security forces. The government generally respected the human rights of its citizens; however, problems included allegations of corruption, violence against women, and instances of child abuse. RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom From: a. Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of Life There were no reports that the government or its agents committed arbitrary or unlawful killings. b. Disappearance There were no reports of politically motivated disappearances. c. Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment The constitution and law prohibit such practices, and there were no confirmed reports that government officials employed them. However, there were occasional allegations that police beat detainees. Flogging, a legal form of punishment, was occasionally used as punishment for sex crimes. Prison and Detention Center Conditions Prison conditions generally met international standards, with the exception of overcrowding, and the government permitted visits by independent human rights observers. -
Research, Repression, and Revolution— on Montreal and the Black Radical Tradition: an Interview with David Austin
THE CLR JAMES JOURNAL 20:1-2, Fall 2014 197-232 doi: 10.5840/clrjames201492319 Research, Repression, and Revolution— On Montreal and the Black Radical Tradition: An Interview with David Austin Peter James Hudson " ll roads lead to Montreal" is the title of an essay of yours on Black Montreal in the 1960s published in the Journal of African American History. But can you describe the road that led you to both Montreal and to the historical and theoretical work that you have done on the city over the past decades. A little intellectual biography . I first arrived in Montreal from London, England in 1980 with my brother to join my family. (We had been living with my maternal grandmother in London.) I was almost ten years old and spent two years in Montreal before moving to Toronto. I went to junior high school and high school in Toronto, but Montreal was always a part of my consciousness and we would visit the city on occasion, and I also used to play a lot of basketball so I traveled to Montreal once or twice for basketball tournaments. As a high school student I would frequent a bookstore called Third World Books and Crafts and it was there that I first discovered Walter Rodney's The Groundings with My Brothers. Three chapters in that book were based on presentations delivered by Rodney in Montreal during and after the Congress of Black Writers. So that was my first indication that something unique had happened in Montreal. My older brother Andrew was a college student at the time in Toronto and one day he handed me a book entitled Let the Niggers Burn! The Sir George Williams Affair and its Caribbean Aftermath, edited by Denis Forsythe. -
Birding in the Southern Caribbean
Trinidad and Grenada Birding in the southern Caribbean Trinidad is situated just a few miles off the coast of Venezuela in South America and offers an ideal introduction to the birdlife of South America. The secret of the island's varied avifauna lies in the wide range of habitats, which includes high mountains, rainforests, marshes, agricultural lands and abandoned cocoa plantations. These diverse areas attract a wide range of birds from North and South America. Our base in Trinidad is the world-famous Asa Wright Nature Centre, which is located within tropical rainforest habitats. Grenada in contrast is a tiny island famous for the production of spices, notably nutmeg. The island has several interesting areas for birds, including the Mount Harman Estate which is home to the critically endangered Grenada Dove. Day 1: Fly to Port of Spain, the capital of Tr inidad and Tobago, and transfer to the Dates Asa Wright Nature Centre, which will be Friday November 19th – Tuesday our base for the holiday. November 30th 2021 Leader: Simon Papps and local Days 2-8: Today is spent in and around guides the centre, which is situated on a ridge at Group Size 7 360 metres in the grounds of an old cocoa Birds: 200-250 plantation. The view from the veranda is over a rainforest valley with the lowlands of the island visible in the distance. The high- itself has many hummingbird feeders er trees often give views of Channel-billed attracting Bananaquit, White-necked Toucan and Bearded Bellbird giving their Jacobin, Black-throated Mango, Blue- hammer-and-anvil-like calls. -
An Ethnography of African Diasporic Affiliation and Disaffiliation in Carriacou: How Anglo-Caribbean Preadolescent Girls Express Attachments to Africa
University of Massachusetts Amherst ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Doctoral Dissertations Dissertations and Theses August 2015 An Ethnography of African Diasporic Affiliation and Disaffiliation in Carriacou: How Anglo-Caribbean Preadolescent Girls Express Attachments to Africa Valerie Joseph University of Massachusetts Amherst Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations_2 Part of the Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons Recommended Citation Joseph, Valerie, "An Ethnography of African Diasporic Affiliation and Disaffiliation in Carriacou: How Anglo-Caribbean Preadolescent Girls Express Attachments to Africa" (2015). Doctoral Dissertations. 370. https://doi.org/10.7275/6962219.0 https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations_2/370 This Open Access Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Dissertations and Theses at ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. It has been accepted for inclusion in Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. For more information, please contact [email protected]. AN ETHNOGRAPHY OF AFRICAN DIASPORIC AFFILIATION AND DISAFFILIATION IN CARRIACOU: HOW ANGLO-CARIBBEAN PREADOLESCENT GIRLS EXPRESS ATTACHMENTS TO AFRICA A Dissertation Presented By Valerie Joseph Submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Massachusetts Amherst in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY May 2015 Department of Anthropology © Copyright by Valerie Joseph 2015 All Rights Reserved AN ETHNOGRAPHY OF -
Nest Density and Success of Columbids in Puerto Rico ’
The Condor98:1OC-113 0 The CooperOrnithological Society 1996 NEST DENSITY AND SUCCESS OF COLUMBIDS IN PUERTO RICO ’ FRANK F. RIVERA-MILAN~ Department ofNatural Resources,Scientific Research Area, TerrestrialEcology Section, Stop 3 Puerta. de Tierra, 00906, Puerto Rico Abstract. A total of 868 active nests of eight speciesof pigeonsand doves (columbids) were found in 210 0.1 ha strip-transectssampled in the three major life zones of Puerto Rico from February 1987 to June 1992. The columbids had a peak in nest density in May and June, with a decline during the July to October flocking period, and an increasefrom November to April. Predation accountedfor 8 1% of the nest lossesobserved from 1989 to 1992. Nest cover was the most important microhabitat variable accountingfor nest failure or successaccording to univariate and multivariate comparisons. The daily survival rate estimates of nests constructed on epiphytes were significantly higher than those of nests constructedon the bare branchesof trees. Rainfall of the first six months of the year during the study accounted for 67% and 71% of the variability associatedwith the nest density estimatesof the columbids during the reproductivepeak in the xerophytic forest of Gulnica and dry coastal forest of Cabo Rojo, but only 9% of the variability of the nest density estimatesof the columbids in the moist montane second-growthforest patchesof Cidra. In 1988, the abundance of fruits of key tree species(nine speciescombined) was positively correlatedwith the seasonalchanges in nest density of the columbids in the strip-transects of Cayey and Cidra. Pairwise density correlationsamong the columbids suggestedparallel responsesof nestingpopulations to similar or covarying resourcesin the life zones of Puerto Rico. -
I No Mas Vietnams! ^ Sodalistas: EUA Fuera De Centroamerica ^ Acto En NY Contra Ocupacion De Granada
Vol. 8, No. 21 12 de noviembre de 1984 UNA REVISTA SOCIALISTA DESTINADA A DEFENDER LOS INTERESES DEL PUEBLO TRABAJADOR I No mas Vietnams! ^ Sodalistas: EUA fuera de Centroamerica ^ Acto en NY contra ocupacion de Granada Lou HowortlPerspectiva Mundial NUEVA YORK—Setecientos manifestantes marcharon el 27 de octubre por las calles de Brooklyn —donde vive una de las concen- traciones mas grandes de afronorteamericanos y afrocaribenos en Estados Unidos— en protesta contra la Invasion y continua ocu pacion militar norteamericana de Granada. Los manifestantes tambien exigieron el cese Inmediato de la intervencidn militar norte- americana en Centroamerica y el Caribe. Igualmente denunciaron el arresto dos dias antes de Dessima Williams, quien fuera em- bajadora del gobierno revolucionario de Granada ante la Organizacion de Estados Americanos. Wiliiams, quien iba a ser ia oradora principal de la protesta, fue arrestada en Washington, D.C. por agentes del Servicio de Inmigracion y Naturalizacion, y acusada de estar ilegalmente en el pais. Una amplia gama de organizaciones politicas, comunitarias, afronorteamericanas y de solidaridad or- ganizaron la accion. uestra America Mujeres hondurenas: victimas de la guerra norteamericana Por Lee Martindale pagan una tarifa mensual al comandante del batallon local del ejercito hondurefio, lo cual les ampara de la intervencion policial. Una noticia publicada en El Diario/La Prensa el 30 de julio, y titula- "'Si una mujer que no pertenece al burdel pasea por el distrito, la po- do "Honduras: Crece la prostitucion en ambiente militar" relata la si- licfa la mete en un establecimiento porque asume que trabaja afuera del guiente historia: sistema', indico. -
General Assembly
UNITED NATIONS Distr. GENERAL GENERAL A/72CO/Add .10* ASSEMBLY 14 November 1968 ORIGINAL: ENGLISH Twenty-third session Agenda item 23 REPORT OF 'I'HE SPECIAL CCMMI'ITEE ON THE SI'IUATION WITH REGARD TO THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE DECLARATION ON 'IRE GRANTING OF INDEPENDENCE TO COLONIAL COUNTRIES AND PEOPLES (covering its vork during 1968) Rapporteur: Mr. Abdul Samad GHAUS (Afghanistan) CHAPTERS XXVI-XXXI CONTENTS Chapter Paragraphs Page XXVI. ANTIGUA, DCMINICA, GRENADA, ST. KITTS-NEVIS ANGUILLA, ST. LUCIA AND ST. VINCENT .... 3 I. CONSIDERATION BY THE SPECIAL COMMI'ITEE 1 - 12 3 II. DECISIONS OF THE SPECIAL COMMI'I·TEE 6 ANNEXES I. ANTIGUA, DCMINICA, GRENADA, ST. KITTS-NEVIS ANGUILLA, ST. LUCIA AND ST, VINCENT: Working paper prepared by the Secretariat 7 II. REPORT OF SUB-COMMITTEE III 47 XXVII . UNITED STATES VIRGIN ISL.Ar-rns 48 I. CONSIDERATION BY THE SPECIAL COMMITTEE 1 - 9 48 II. DECISION OF THE SPECIAL CCMMITTEE 49 ANNEXES I. UNITED STATES VIRGIN ISLANDS: Working paper prepared by the Secre~ariat •••. 5l II. REPORT OF SUB-CCMMI'ITEE III . • 69 * This document contains chapters XXVI-XXXI of the Special Committee's report to the General Assembly. The ceneral introdu.ctory chapter will be issued subseq_uently under the symbol A/7200. Other chapters of the report will be issued SLlbseq_uently under the same symbol (A/7200) or as addenda. / ... -2- CONTENTS (continutd) Chapter Paragraphs XXVIII. BERMUDA, BAHAM.AS, TURKS AND CAICOS ISLANDS, CAYMAN ISLANDS AND MONTSERRAT •..••••...•• . 70 I. CONSIDERATION BY THE SPECIAL COMMITTEE 1 - 20 70 II. DECISIONS OF THE SPECIAL COMMI'ITEE 72 ANNEXES I. -
The Army Lawyer (ISSN 0364-1287) Editor Virginia 22903-1781
f- THE ARMY Headquarters, Department of the Army Department of the Army Pamphlet The Legal Basis for United 27-60-148 States Military Action April 1986 in Grenada Table of Contents Major Thomas J. Romig The Legal Basis for United States Instructor, International Law Division, Military Action in Grenada 1 TJAGSA Preventive Law and Automated Data "The Marshal said that over two decades Processing Acquisitions 16 ago, there was only Cuba in Latin Amer ica, today there are Nicaragua, Grenada, The Advocacy Section 21 and a serious battle is going on in El Sal vados. "I Trial Counsel Forum 21 "Thank God they came. If someone had not come inand done something, I hesitate The Advocate 40 to say what the situation in Grenada would be now. 'JZ Automation Developments 58 I. Introduction Criminal Law Notes 60 During the early morning hours of 25 October 1983, an assault force spearheaded by US Navy Legal Assistance Items 61 'Memorandum of Conversation between Soviet Army Chief Professional Responsibility Opinion 84-2 67 of General Staff Marshal Nikolai V.Ogarkov and Grenadian Army Chief of Staff Einstein Louison, who was then in the t Regulatory Law Item 68 Soviet Union for training, on 10 March 1983, 9uoted in Preface lo Grmactn: A Preliminary Rqorl, released by the Departments of State and Defense (Dec. 16, 1983) [here j CLE News 68 inafter cited as Preliminary Report]. 'Statement by Alister Hughes, a Grenadian journalist im- Current Material of Interest 72 Drisoned by the militaryjunta.. on 19 October 1983, after he was released by US Military Forces, qctolrd in N.Y. -
Social Policies in Grenada
Social Policies in Grenada Patsy Lewis COMMONWEALTH SECRETARIAT © Commonwealth Secretariat and United Nations Research Institute for Social Development 2010 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or otherwise without the permission of the publisher. Published by the Commonwealth Secretariat Edited and designed by Wayzgoose Cover design by Tattersall Hammarling & Silk Printed by Hobbs the Printers Ltd, Totton, Hampshire Prepared for the joint Commonwealth Secretariat and UNRISD Project on Social Policies in Small States. Support for this paper was also received from the UNICEF Office for Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean. Established in 1963, the United Nations Research Institute for Social Development (UNRISD) is an autonomous institution within the UN system that carries out multidisciplinary research on the social dimensions of contemporary development issues. Through its research, UNRISD stimulates dialogue and contributes to policy debates on key issues of social development within and outside the UN system. Visit www.unrisd.org for full details. The Commonwealth is a voluntary association of 54 countries that support each other and work together towards shared goals in democracy and development. The Commonwealth Secretariat executes plans agreed by Commonwealth Heads of Government through technical assistance, advice and policy development. It works as a trusted partner for all Commonwealth people as: a force for peace, democracy, equality and good governance; a catalyst for global consensus-building; and a source of assistance for sustainable development and poverty eradication. Views and opinions expressed in this publication are the responsibility of the author and should in no way be attributed to the institution to which she is affiliated or to UNICEF, UNRISD or the Commonwealth Secretariat. -
1 in the Supreme Court of Grenada and the West
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF GRENADA AND THE WEST INDIES ASSOCIATED STATES GRENADA HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE SUIT NO. GDAHCV 2012/0463 BETWEEN: [1] IGNATIUS KARL HOOD Claimant/Applicant and [1] TILLMAN THOMAS [2] NAZIM BURKE [3] FRANKA BERNADINE [4] KEN JOSEPH [5] BERNARD ISSAC Defendants/Respondents Appearances: Mr. Cajeton Hood, Ms. Kim George and Ms. Venescia Francis-Banfield for the Claimant/Applicant Ms. Claudette Joseph and Mr. Alban John and with him Ms.Thandiwe Lyle for the Defendants/Respondents -------------------------------------- 2012: December 12; 20. -------------------------------------- DECISION [1] MOHAMMED, J.: The Claimant/Applicant (“the Claimant”) is the present Member of Parliament for St. George South East constituency in Grenada, having successfully contested the seat in the 2008 general election under the umbrella of the National Democratic Congress (“the NDC”). He was also the former Minister of Foreign Affairs in the present government but due to unhappy circumstances he resigned from this position. He instituted this action after becoming aware via the 1 media on 30th September 2012 that he was expelled as a member of the NDC, at its convention held on the same day. By his action he is claiming certain declaratory reliefs namely that his purported revocation as a member of the NDC on 30th September 2012 was void and that all actions which flow from his purported revocation are also void. He also seeks an order to be reinstated as a member of the NDC and to stop the Defendants/respondents (‘the Defendants”) from preventing him from participating in the activities of the NDC. [2] He has sought two interim reliefs namely: to stop the Defendants from preventing him as a member of the NDC from participating in its activities and to prevent them from selecting, announcing, registering or otherwise identifying any candidate for the upcoming parliamentary elections for the constituency of St.