The reality of reparations: an exploration of neo-colonialism, morality and control in the Caribbean

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Date
2021
Authors
Khan, Amna
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Caribbean Studies Students' Union
Abstract
Reparations are widely understood as the process by which compensation is given or amends made for previous wrongdoing. In the context of the Caribbean, it may refer to official actions taken by former colonial powers to acknowledge and recompense states affected by colonialism and slavery. This paper seeks to analyse discussions of reparations in the region and consider how the lack of com- pensation may be perceived as demonstrating that modern power relations are merely repackaged propagations of imperialism. Fundamentally, this paper argues that the notion that colonisation was left behind in the 19th century with the abolition of slavery or mid-20th Century with the political indepen- dence of Caribbean nation-states is a facade and uses reparations discourse as the foremost example of such. This is demonstrated through the following questions: Why do reparations need to be paid? Why are they not being paid? And What needs to change?
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Keywords
Caribbean, Politics, Colonialism, Reparations discourse, Neo-colonial economics, CARICOM
Citation
Khan, A. (2021). The reality of reparations: an exploration of neo-colonialism, morality and control in the Caribbean. Caribbean Quilt, 6(1), 55-62. https://doi.org/10.33137/cq.v6i1.36901
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