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Neo-liberalism, 21st Century Caribbean General Elections and the Post-colonial Development Challenge
Authors:Tennyson S. D. Joseph
Affiliation:1. University of the West Indies, Cave Hill, Barbadostennyson.joseph@cavehill.uwi.edu
Abstract:A striking feature of elections held in the independent English-speaking Caribbean since 2000 has been the tendency towards the rejection of incumbent governments, with many of them resulting in one-term administrations or weak majorities. This experience represents a sharp break from earlier electoral features of the post-colonial period such as mass loyalty to anti-colonial workers’ parties, regular and consistent alternations of two dominant parties in office, or alternatively the long-term dominance of a single party. This paper argues that the present hegemonic consolidation of neo-liberal globalisation has eroded the structural framework upon which the earlier legitimacy of the parties, leaders, ideologies and approaches to development had been constructed, and advances the notion of the ‘collapse of the post-colonial order’ as an explanation for the dominant electoral feature of anti-incumbency since 2000. While addressing developments in the independent English-speaking Caribbean territories as a whole, the paper concludes by presenting the case of Barbados as a concrete manifestation of these tendencies.
Keywords:The Caribbean  Barbados  globalisation  St Lucia  Antigua  Trinidad and Tobago  Jamaica  St Kitts and Nevis  Dominica  St Vincent and the Grenadines  Guyana  neo-liberalism
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