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Jamaica and the Sugar Worker Cooperatives

Book

Jamaica and the Sugar Worker Cooperatives

DOI link for Jamaica and the Sugar Worker Cooperatives

Jamaica and the Sugar Worker Cooperatives book

The Politics of Reform

Jamaica and the Sugar Worker Cooperatives

DOI link for Jamaica and the Sugar Worker Cooperatives

Jamaica and the Sugar Worker Cooperatives book

The Politics of Reform
ByCarl Henry Feuer
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 1984
eBook Published 19 July 2019
Pub. Location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429047176
Pages 236
eBook ISBN 9780429047176
Subjects Politics & International Relations
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Feuer, C.H. (1984). Jamaica and the Sugar Worker Cooperatives: The Politics of Reform (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429047176

ABSTRACT

Between 1974 and 1977, as part of a wider attempt by Prime Minister Michael Manley's regime to carry out a democratic reformist strategy of development, the three largest sugar estates in Jamaica were converted into worker-managed farms. Within a few years, however, the cooperative program was in disarray as the farms faced economic setbacks and as political conflicts developed among the sugar workers, local authorities, and the government. Drawing on his extensive field research in Jamaica, Dr. Feuer traces the development and decline of the cooperative system and discusses the implications for the possibility of democratic reform. In his view, the logic of the cooperativization process conflicted with the priorities of the middle class, which continued to dominate the Jamaican economy. As a result, the reforms were never firmly rooted in a political coalition with the resources to carry them out. In light of the Jamaican experience, Dr. Feuer considers such questions as: What are the obstacles a nonrevolutionary regime is likely to face in an effort to help the poor? How feasible is it to mobilize the requisite political and administrative resources and neutralize the inherent constraints to reform?

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|12 pages

Underdevelopment and Reform: The Case of Jamaica

chapter 2|16 pages

The Sweet and the Sour: Sugar and Jamaica in the Twentieth Century

chapter 3|17 pages

Policy and Procrastination, 1972–1973

chapter 4|22 pages

Conflict and Cooperatives, 1974-1975

chapter 5|21 pages

Structure and Organization of the Cooperatives

chapter 6|20 pages

Counter–Reform: Demobilizing the Sugar Worker Movement

chapter 7|28 pages

Social Relations at the Grass Roots Among Workers, Managers, and Staff

chapter 8|14 pages

Economic Outcomes at the Grass Roots: The Workers

chapter 9|21 pages

Economic Outcomes at the Grass Roots: The Farms

chapter 10|24 pages

The Political Economy of Grass-Roots Reform: Summary and Conclusion

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