Movement Towards Independence
Movement Towards Independence
Movement Towards Independence
From emancipation until the end of the nineteenth century Caribbean people were shaking off
the mental, psychological and emotional trauma associated with enslaved and bonded labour.
(Mohammed, 2007)
The abolition of slavery in 1834 in the British colonies did not result in any meaningful change
in the social, economic or political wellbeing of ex-slaves. However, freedom from slavery
created a demand for greater freedoms, and so began the movement to independence.
Economic enfranchisement
Economic enfranchisement is the condition whereby a country or nation achieves the right to
determine how it will develop its system of production (Mohammed, 2007). The downturn in
sugar prices caused the decline in the plantation economies; as a result the peasant farmers
developed alternative crops (cocoa, banana, coffee, ginger arrowroot) for export and national
consumption.
The peasant system developed an economic basis for independence from the plantation and the
colonial rule by:
On the break-up of the Federation independence was granted to the larger territories
Country
Year of Independence
Jamaica
Trinidad and Tobago
Barbados
Guyana
Bahamas
Grenada
Dominica
St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines
Antigua and Barbuda
St. Kitts and Nevis
1962
1966
1973
1974
1978
1979
1981
1983
Hamber. S., &. Greenwood, R. (1986). Development and De-colonization. London: Macmillan
Publishers Ltd.
Sunshine, Catherine. (1988). The Caribbean: Struggle, Survival and Sovereignty. USA: EPICA.