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Big Revolution, Small Country: The Rise and Fall of the Grenada Revolution  (Jay R. Mandle)

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Revision as of 12:42, 8 August 2024 by Ledlecreeper27 (talk | contribs) (Headings)


Big Revolution, Small Country: The Rise and Fall of the Grenada Revolution
AuthorJay R. Mandle
PublisherThe North-South Publishing Company
First published1985
Sourcehttps://archive.org/details/BigRevolutionSmallCountry-TheRiseAndFallOfTheGrenadaRevolution/mode/1up

"The legacy of this neofascist regime for the people of our nation was a total dependence on imperialism, a reality that meant extreme poverty, characterized by massive unemployment, with more than half of the work force out of work, high malnutrition, illiteracy, backwardness, superstitution, poor housing and health conditions, combined with overall economic stagnation and mas- sive migration.

"Such a situation was intolerable and as such the progressive forces of our nation got together in March 1973, under the leader- ship of our party, the New Jewel Movement, in order to take power so as to revolutionize our economy, our politics and our society. And the most important stage in that process ended on March 13 this year when our party led a successful and popular revolution to take power in our country — a revolution that Comrade Fidel Castro has referred to both as "a successful Moncada" and "a big revolution in a small country." And from that day, our people, our government, and our party have been trying to build a new, just, free and revolutionary Grenada."

—Maurice Bishop, "Imperialism Is Not Invincible," September 6, 1979. Reprinted in Bruce Marcus and Michael laber, eds., Maurice Bishop Speaks: The Grenada Revolution 1979-83 (New York: Path- finder Press, 1983), p. 49.

Preface

The Plantation Economy and Its Aftermath

The Plantation Economy

The Agriculture of Grenada

The End of Paternalism

Gairyism

The Rise of the New Jewel Movement

The Military Takeover

Assessment

The Economy

Economic Performance

Tourism and the Airport

Agricultural Policy

Assessment

Paternalism and the New Democracy

A "New Democracy"

The Non-Capitalist Path

Paternalistic Socialism

The Content of the "New Democracy"

Assessment

The New Jewel Movement under Stress

The Need for Renewal

Search for Solutions

Joint Leadership

Fragmentation

Assessment

"A Big Revolution in a Small Country"

The Collapse of the Revolution

Lessons for the Left

The Lure of Paternalism

Assessment