Description
Pages: 239
Year: 2000
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Between Self-Determination and Dependency analyses the nature and trajectory of Jamaica’s foreign relations from 1972 to 1989. The central argument is that the relative autonomy of the Jamaican state declined due to the evolution of a new international regime which in effect disallowed the political, social and economic experimentation originally envisioned. Neither the attempt at radical nationalism by the People’s National Party, nor the ‘accommodationist’ stance of the Jamaica Labour Party served to reduce Jamaica’s structural dependency.
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