Beginning in the 1920s, Barbadians and other British West Indians began organizing politically in an international environment that was marked by a severe capitalist economic and financial crisis that intensified in the 1930s. The response in the British Caribbean during the 1930s was in the form of rebellions that demanded colonial reform. The ensuing struggles resulted in constitutional and political changes that led to decolonization and independence. In Errol Walton Barrow and the Postwar Transformation of Barbados: The Late Colonial Period, Hilbourne Watson examines the contradictory process through the lens of political economy and class analysis, informed by an internationalist historical perspective that centres the concerns and int...
This thesis explores the British and the Barbadian perspectives on the Confederation Riots that occ...
In 1937–38 Barbados introduced old-age pensions for its poor, black population. This radical innovat...
The Atlantic slave economy was crucial to Britain’s colonial enterprise during the eighteenth centur...
When British West Indian colonies achieved full emancipation in 1838, Jamaica occupied the unique po...
At the turn of the nineteenth century, Britishness was integral to the culture of colonialism that p...
[Second and third pragraph] While much has been written on the significance of British Caribbea...
This dissertation analyzes struggles over the development of Barbadian health and sanitation during ...
This MA thesis analyzes socio-political development on the islands of Trinidad and Tobago throughout...
Beginning in 1935, African and Indian youth, women and men who comprised the sugar plantation labor ...
The Black Power movements in the English-speaking Caribbean territories faced tremendous repression ...
In 1947 Great Britain together its Caribbean colonies to discuss the idea of a closer association am...
The new Federation of the British territories of the Caribbean area will come into being in 1957, wi...
This thesis examines Black Power in Jamaica, Trinidad, and The Bahamas, comparing and contrasting th...
The white community in the British Caribbean was riven by conflicts and scandals in the late sevente...
How were social groups made in the colonial encounter? Do they persist into the present? Are social ...
This thesis explores the British and the Barbadian perspectives on the Confederation Riots that occ...
In 1937–38 Barbados introduced old-age pensions for its poor, black population. This radical innovat...
The Atlantic slave economy was crucial to Britain’s colonial enterprise during the eighteenth centur...
When British West Indian colonies achieved full emancipation in 1838, Jamaica occupied the unique po...
At the turn of the nineteenth century, Britishness was integral to the culture of colonialism that p...
[Second and third pragraph] While much has been written on the significance of British Caribbea...
This dissertation analyzes struggles over the development of Barbadian health and sanitation during ...
This MA thesis analyzes socio-political development on the islands of Trinidad and Tobago throughout...
Beginning in 1935, African and Indian youth, women and men who comprised the sugar plantation labor ...
The Black Power movements in the English-speaking Caribbean territories faced tremendous repression ...
In 1947 Great Britain together its Caribbean colonies to discuss the idea of a closer association am...
The new Federation of the British territories of the Caribbean area will come into being in 1957, wi...
This thesis examines Black Power in Jamaica, Trinidad, and The Bahamas, comparing and contrasting th...
The white community in the British Caribbean was riven by conflicts and scandals in the late sevente...
How were social groups made in the colonial encounter? Do they persist into the present? Are social ...
This thesis explores the British and the Barbadian perspectives on the Confederation Riots that occ...
In 1937–38 Barbados introduced old-age pensions for its poor, black population. This radical innovat...
The Atlantic slave economy was crucial to Britain’s colonial enterprise during the eighteenth centur...