The Power of Social Movements and the Limits of Pluralism: Tracing Rastafarianism and Indigenous Resurgence through Commonwealth Caribbean Law and Culture

Author:

Becker Emily

Abstract

In the post-colonial era, social movements in the Commonwealth Caribbean have empowered citizens to reclaim, redefine and further develop their identity. These movements, combined with a history of colonialism and transatlantic slavery in the region, have yielded a Caribbean culture “too diverse to be labeled.” Indeed, the Caribbean culture is composed of “a bastion of discrete identities as well as quarries of very invaluable raw material that can be used to build the bridges across cultural boundaries.” These distinct but potentially overlapping identities make the Commonwealth Caribbean a truly pluralistic region, at least at the cultural and social level. As modern legal and political systems, however, the states of the Commonwealth Caribbean have, in many ways, failed to sufficiently protect the non-dominant groups within Caribbean. Indeed, attempts to balance the majoritarian demands of democracy against the pluralist notion of minority rights protection have landed largely on the side of majorities.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Reference181 articles.

1. Id.

2. See generally Derek O'Brien & Vaughan Carter, Chant Down Babylon: Freedom of Religion and the Rastafarian Challenge to Majoritarianism, 18 J. L. & Religion 219 (2002).

3. Miranda La Rose, Caribbean culture too diverse to be labelled – Prof Nettleford, StabroekNews (5 Sep 2008), http://www.stabroeknews.com/2008/archives/09/05/caribbean-culture-too-diverse-to-be-labelled-%E2%80%93-prof-nettleford/, (Quoting Professor Rex Nettleford. See Rex Nettleford, Expressions of the Mind: Philosophy and the Making of the Caribbean Nation, Keynote Address at the Carifesta X Symposium (Guyana 2008)).

4. In this paper, I use the term “Commonwealth Caribbean” to refer to independent, English-speaking states in the Caribbean, including: Antigua and Barbuda, the Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and Trinidad and Tobago.

5. Id.

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