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Jamaica Under Seaga: 1981-1983 Linus A
New Directions Volume 12 | Issue 4 Article 17 10-1-1985 Jamaica Under Seaga: 1981-1983 Linus A. Hoskins Follow this and additional works at: http://dh.howard.edu/newdirections Recommended Citation Hoskins, Linus A. (1985) "Jamaica Under Seaga: 1981-1983," New Directions: Vol. 12: Iss. 4, Article 17. Available at: http://dh.howard.edu/newdirections/vol12/iss4/17 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Howard @ Howard University. It has been accepted for inclusion in New Directions by an authorized administrator of Digital Howard @ Howard University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Jamaica Under Seaga: 1981-1983 26 By Linus A. Hoskins rime Minister [Edward] Seaga viewed his [1980] election as “a declaration against Commu Pnism in Jamaica” and promised a moderate government following a nonaligned policy of good relations with all.1 Describing his party’s victory in the October 30, 1980 general elec tions as “an overwhelming mandate by the people of Jamaica,” the prime minister has insisted that the victory enabled his government to “give the people the policies and programmes necessary to restore the economy.” In his first official address to the people, he said: . .. We hope to offer, in this new era o f our political life, the people of famaica a principled government. We hope to offer the people o f Jamaica in this new era creative government. We hope to offer a government o f sanity. We hope to offer a government that knows where it is going and can say so with conviction and with credibility. -
Tourism and Place in Treasure Beach, Jamaica: Imagining Paradise and the Alternative. Michael J
Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses Graduate School 1999 Tourism and Place in Treasure Beach, Jamaica: Imagining Paradise and the Alternative. Michael J. Hawkins Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses Recommended Citation Hawkins, Michael J., "Tourism and Place in Treasure Beach, Jamaica: Imagining Paradise and the Alternative." (1999). LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses. 7044. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses/7044 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bteedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. -
Modes of Address in the Jamaican Order of Precedence
MODES OF ADDRESS IN THE JAMAICAN ORDER OF PRECEDENCE 1 CONTENTS The Head of State -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------3-5 The Queen The Governor-General The Head of Government -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------6 The Prime Minister Ministers of Government -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------8-9 The Deputy Prime Minister Cabinet Ministers Ministers of State The Leader of the Opposition -------------------------------------------------------------------------------10 The Senate--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------11-12 The President of the Senate Members of the Senate Members of the House of Representatives ------------------------------------------------------------13-15 The Speaker of the House of Representatives Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives The Attorney General Former Governors-General --------------------------------------------------------------------------------16 Former Prime Ministers --------------------------------------------------------------------------------17-18 The Judiciary--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------19-21 The Chief Justice The President of the Court of Appeal Judges of the Court of Appeal, Supreme Court and Parish Courts Members of the Privy Council President of the Jamaica Council of Churches----------------------------------------------------------22 -
The Evolution of Political Violence in Jamaica 1940-1980
The Evolution of Political Violence in Jamaica 1940-1980 Kareen Felicia Williams Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2011 Copyright 2011 Kareen Williams All rights reserved. ABSTRACT The Evolution of Political Violence in Jamaica 1940-1980 Kareen Williams By the 1960s violence became institutionalized in modern Jamaican politics. This endemic violence fostered an unstable political environment that developed out of a symbiotic relationship between Jamaican labor organizations and political violence. Consequently, the political process was destabilized by the corrosive influence of partisan politics, whereby party loyalists dependent on political patronage were encouraged by the parties to defend local constituencies and participate in political conflict. Within this system the Jamaican general election process became ominous and violent, exemplifying how limited political patronage was dispersed among loyal party supporters. This dissertation examines the role of the political parties and how they mobilized grassroots supporters through inspirational speeches, partisan ideology, complex political patronage networks, and historic party platform issues from 1940 through 1980. The dissertation argues that the development of Jamaican trade unionism and its corresponding leadership created the political framework out of which Jamaica’s two major political parties, the Jamaica Labor Party (JLP) and People’s National Party -
The Evolution of Political Violence in Jamaica 1940-1980 Kareen Felicia
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Columbia University Academic Commons The Evolution of Political Violence in Jamaica 1940-1980 Kareen Felicia Williams Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2011 Copyright 2011 Kareen Williams All rights reserved. ABSTRACT The Evolution of Political Violence in Jamaica 1940-1980 Kareen Williams By the 1960s violence became institutionalized in modern Jamaican politics. This endemic violence fostered an unstable political environment that developed out of a symbiotic relationship between Jamaican labor organizations and political violence. Consequently, the political process was destabilized by the corrosive influence of partisan politics, whereby party loyalists dependent on political patronage were encouraged by the parties to defend local constituencies and participate in political conflict. Within this system the Jamaican general election process became ominous and violent, exemplifying how limited political patronage was dispersed among loyal party supporters. This dissertation examines the role of the political parties and how they mobilized grassroots supporters through inspirational speeches, partisan ideology, complex political patronage networks, and historic party platform issues from 1940 through 1980. The dissertation argues that the development of Jamaican trade unionism and its corresponding leadership created the political framework out of which Jamaica’s two major political parties, the Jamaica Labor Party (JLP) and People’s National Party (PNP) emerged. Within the evolution of their support base Jamaican politicians such as Alexander Bustamante utilized their influence over local constituencies to create a garrison form of mobilization that relied heavily upon violence. -
Jamaica II a Political Overview
NOT FOR PUBLICATION INSTITUTE OF CURRENT WORLD AFFAIRS Kings ton, Jamaica April 25, 1970 FJM-- 21 Jamaica II A political overview Mr. Richard Nolte Executive Director Institute of Current World Affairs 535 Fifth Avenue New York, N.Y. 10017. Dear Mr. Nolte: Traditionally, Jamaica has been recognized as the touchstone of West Indian (British Caribbean) politics. Sister states throughout the region have followed Jamaica's historic slave rebellions in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries. The popular uprising in Morant Bay in 1865 and the labour strikes begun at Frome in 1937 also created reverberations throughout the Caribbean. Indeed, there is great significance in the fact that Jamaica was the first British Caribbean Territory to gain full independence in 1962. (Only recently has Jamaica's paramount place been challenged by Trinidad's ardent regionalists and radical activists who are setting the direction for political patterns of the future.) Further, such historical presence in the politics of the region has been naturally re-enforced by Jamaica's relative economic wealth, size and population when compared to the Eastern Caribbean. As a result, Jamaican politics are first characterised by an ingrained sense of arrogant nationalism, a nationalism which accounts for the island's political insularity and its reluctance to fashion any binding ties with the rest of the Caribbean. This Jamaican nationalism is critically recognized though grudgingly accepted by the other Caribbean states. And no better tribute has been made to that nationalism or its effect on the nine other Caribbean states than Dr. Eric Williams' remark on learning of Jamaica's withdrawal from their aborted Federation "Ten minus one equals zero." Another pair of historical factors are perhaps more pertinent to contemporary Jamaican politics. -
Modes of Address in the Jamaican Order of Precedence
MODES OF ADDRESS IN THE JAMAICAN ORDER OF PRECEDENCE 1 CONTENTS The Head of State The Queen The Governor-General The Head of Government The Prime Minister Ministers of Government The Deputy Prime Minister Cabinet Ministers Ministers of State The Leader of the Opposition The Senate The President of the Senate Members of the Senate Members of the House of Representatives The Speaker of the House of Representatives Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives The Attorney General Former Governors-General Former Prime Ministers The Judiciary The Chief Justice The President of the Court of Appeal Judges of the Court of Appeal, Supreme Court and Parish Courts President of the Jamaica Council of Churches Head of the Civil Service Head of the Foreign Service Heads of Diplomatic Missions in Jamaica Ambassadors High Commissioners Head of the Delegation of the European Commission Chargés d’ Affaires, Consuls General Heads of International Organizations December 2020 2 Members of the Privy Council Chairman of the Public Services Commission Financial Secretary/ Permanent Secretaries Solicitor General Governor of the Bank of Jamaica Auditor General Director of Public Prosecutions Chief of Defence Staff Commissioner of Police Mayors Custodes of Parishes Vice Chancellor of the University of the West Indies President of the University of Technology Chairmen and Secretaries of the Political Parties having representation in Parliament Holders of Jamaican National Honours Order of Merit Order of Jamaica December 2020 3 MODES OF ADDRESS IN THE JAMAICAN ORDER OF PRECEDENCE Head of State of Jamaica The Queen The full Royal Style and Title of the Queen is: ‘Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God of Jamaica and of Her other Realms and Territories Queen, Head of the Commonwealth’. -
Institute of Commonwealth Studies
University of London INSTITUTE OF COMMONWEALTH STUDIES VOICE FILE NAME: COHP The Most Hon Edward Seaga Key: SO: Dr Sue Onslow (Interviewer) ES: The Most Hon Edward Seaga (Respondent) SO: This is Dr Sue Onslow talking to the Most Honourable Edward Seaga in Kingston, Jamaica, on Tuesday, 20th January 2015. Sir, thank you very much indeed for agreeing to give this interview for the Commonwealth Oral Histories Project. You have remarked that you were not that engaged nor attentive to the Commonwealth as a politician or while you were Prime Minister. ES: The Commonwealth had very little contact. I once went to the Commonwealth office in London during a visit to the UK because I had an idea that there was a role to be played that could be done at the parliamentary level. I wanted to find out if the Commonwealth had any precedent of the Judiciary playing a role which would be regulatory, insofar as conduct of members was concerned: a type of Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards to oversee codes of conduct for MPs and ministers of government. I raised the matter here in the Jamaican Parliament. This was in or around 1994. Having done so, we came to the conclusion that, where it was something that the Parliament had to take a decision on the conduct of an individual, it had to be a parliamentary committee. But the problem would be, “Who’s going to be the odd man in an even number of parliamentarians? Who can credibly make the judgment? Who would have the casting vote, given the political affiliation of the members?” SO: Yes, because of the political asymmetry of the deciding, casting vote. -
The Most Honourable Hugh Lawson Shearer, ON, OJ
NATIO A The Most Honourable Hugh Lawson Shearer, ON, OJ May 18, 1923 - July 05, 2004 II is Jamaica today is our country. It Ttook us years to struggle to earn the right to become Jamaicans, and now that we are our own people and no longer subjects of others we can no longer shelve our identity by hiding among the nationals in other societies. "Where there is no pride there can be no glory, where there is no identity there can be no satisfaction in accomplishments. "Here in this country, every Jamaican can look around him and see the things that he and other Jamaicans have built, and be proud of them. Here, we are part of our earth, part of our society, part of the events which take place everyday, part of the people we live among, part of the progress and developments that are changing the shape of our country; and we can identify ourselves with these things and feel a sense of satisfaction in these our accomplishments. "Nowhere else in this wide world can this pride and satisfaction be a part of us." The Most Honourable Hugh Lawson Shearer Excerpt from an address to Vere Technical High School The Most Honourable Hugh Lawson Shearer, ON, OJ (May 18, 1923- July 05, 2004) 1 THE MOST HONOURABLE His father, James Shearer, was a World War I HUGH LAWSON SHEARER, ON, OJ ex-serviceman; and his mother, Esther Lindo, May 18, 1923 -July 05, 2004 was a dressmaker. ., � The Most Honourable Hugh Lawson Shearer, He attended Falmouth Elementary School, ON, OJ exerted robust energies and and distinguished himself in 1936 by winning commitment to Jamaica over his more than six the Trelawny Parish Scholarship, which decades as a nation-builder. -
Shearer As It Lay in State Inside the Vere Technical High SHEARER School Auditorium in the Parish on July 14
National Library of Jamaica �J�aicaobserve�corn If/ ,• I�• 1:*,11 # ./ I I , THESuNDAY OBSERVER ' July 1'8, 20tl4 'page' 3 (,.a·.·... ... ","'.· - · · · · · · · " ' . ..·.·. � . ) ... ·.·�·, , .. '. ·, ,· ••. Their take on HUGH Students from a number of Clarendon schools queue to view the body of late prime minister Hugh Shearer as it lay in State inside the Vere Technical High SHEARER School auditorium in the parish on July 14. Following are some of the views expressed by persons, mostly Clarendonians, who attended the first State viewing of Hugh Shearer's body inside the Vere Technical High School auditorium in Clarendon on July 14. Olive Lawrence, Rocky Point resident: Hailed Shearer for being instrumental in the establishment of a fund to care for the spouses and children of fishermen who were lost at sea in 1993. "Mi have to come today because Mr Shearer is a nice man. Him take care of me when my baby's father drown. Him was the only person who come help me." Donna Henry, a mother of two who also lost her baby's father at sea: "Me love Mr Shearer and I feel sad seh him dead. Mi son seh to me, 'Daddy' (the name given to Shearer by the Rocky Point The State Funeral for community) gone, how we going to manage?" The Most Honourable Hugh Lawson Shearer will be held at the Holy Trinity Cathedral, Sally Porteous, deputy mayor of Mandeville: "I think the turn-out North Street, Kingston today is significant of how people on Sunday, July 18, 2004 felt about Mr Shearer. It is very nice to see everybody coming out The service will begin at 2.00 p.m. -
Pan-Africanism/African Nationalism
Pan-Africanism/African Nationalism PAN-AFRICANISM AFRICAN NATIONALISM Strengthening the Unity of Africa and its Diaspora Edited by B.F. Bankie & K. Mchombu The Red Sea Press, Inc. Publishers & Distributors of Third World Books P. O. Box 1892 RSP P. O. Box 48 Trenton, NJ 08607 Asmara, ERITREA The Red Sea Press, Inc. Publishers & Distributors of Third World Books P. O. Box 1892 RSP P. O. Box 48 Trenton, NJ 08607 Asmara, ERITREA Copyright © 2008 B.F. Bankie & K. Mchombu First Africa World Press Edition 2008 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, mechani- cal, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior written permission of the publisher. Book and cover design: Saverance Publishing Services (www.saverancepublishing.com) Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data All African Students’ Conference (17th : 2005 : Windhoek, Namibia) Pan-Africanism/African nationalism : strengthening the unity of Africa and its diaspora / edited by B.F. Bankie & K. Mchombu. -- 2nd ed. p. cm. Rev. ed. of: Pan-Africanism. 2006. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 1-56902-297-6 (hardcover) -- ISBN 1-56902-298-4 (pbk.) 1. Pan-Africanism--Congresses. 2. African diaspora--Congresses. I. Bankie, B. F. II. Mchombu, K. J. (Kingo J.) III. All African Students’ Con- ference (17th : 2005 : Windhoek, Namibia). Pan-Africanism. IV. Title. DT30.5.A48 2005a 320.54096--dc22 2008022490 TABLE OF CONTENts PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION | B. F. Bankie ix DEDICATION TO JOHN GARANG DE MABIOR | Dani Wadada Nabudere xi FOREWORD | Kwesi Kwaa Prah xxix Conference Opening Session 1 Opening Remarks | Elaine Trepper 3 Welcoming Address | Lazarus Hangula 5 Statement | C. -
Hugh Shearer - Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia Page 1 of 2 Z I J Hu H Shearer National Library of Jamaica
.... Hugh Shearer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Page 1 of 2 z I J Hu h Shearer National Library of Jamaica From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. This article is about the former Jamaican Prime Minister, Hugh Shearer. For information on the Privy Council Member, see Hugh Shearer (Privy Council Member). The Right Honourable Hugh Lawson Shearer (May 18, 1923- July 5, 2004) was the fourth Prime Minister of Jamaica, from 1967 to 1972. Born in Martha Brae, Trelawny Parish, Jamaica, near the sugar and banana growing areas, Shearer attended St Simon's College after winning a parish scholarship to the school. Term: 1967 to 1972 In 1941 he took a job on the staff of a weekly trade union newspaper, Predecessor: Alexander Bustamante the Jamaican Worker. His first political promotion came in 1943, Successors: Michael Manley when Sir Alexander Bustamante (founder of the Jamaican Labour Party) took over editorship of the paper and took Shearer under his Date of Birth: May 18, 1923 wing. Shearer continued to get promotion after promotion within the Place of Birth: Jamaica union and acquired a Government Trade Union scholarship in 1947. Political Party: Jamaican Labour Party He was appointed Island Supervisor of Bustamante's trade union, BITU, and shortly afterwards elected Vice President of the union. Shearer was elected to the House of Representatives as member for Western Kingston in 1955, an office he retained for the next four years until he was defeated in the 1959 elections. He was a member of the Senate from 1962 to 1967, at the same time filling the role of Jamaica?s chief spokesman on foreign affairs as Deputy Chief of Mission at the United Nations.