Our systems are now restored following recent technical disruption, and we’re working hard to catch up on publishing. We apologise for the inconvenience caused. Find out more

Recommended product

Popular links

Popular links


The Making of Modern Belize

The Making of Modern Belize

The Making of Modern Belize

Politics, Society and British Colonialism in Central America
C. H. Grant, University of Waterloo, Ontario
December 2008
Available
Paperback
9780521101417
£53.00
GBP
Paperback

    Belize (formerly British Honduras) is a residue of the British Empire and the last colony in the Americas. Like most colonies in this age of decolonisation Belize was willing to break the colonial ties and in fact achieved internal self-government in 1964. It is, however, deterred from taking its full independence by Guatemala's century-old claim to its territory, a claim famous in international law. Belize is more than a British enclave in Central America, it is a meeting place, the borderland of two quite different cultural worlds. These are the White - Creole - Carib and the Spanish - Mestizo - Indian complexes which together produce among Belize's 120,000 inhabitants a racial, linguistic and cultural heterogeneity that is unusual either in the Commonwealth Caribbean or in Central America. There Belize's distinctiveness ends. Structurally, it is as economically dependent as its neighbours. Endowed with luxuriant forest resources, it was from the start a classical example of colonial exploitation, of taking away and not giving back in terms of permanent improvement and capital development. It was only when the forest resources were depleted after the Second World War that its other natural resource, agriculture, received attention.

    Product details

    December 2008
    Paperback
    9780521101417
    424 pages
    229 × 152 × 24 mm
    0.62kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Part I. The colonial order, 1638-1949
    • 1. Colonialism in historical perspective, 1638–1931
    • 2. Latent crisis of the colonial order: economic aspects, 1931–1949
    • 3. Latent crisis of the colonial order: political aspects, 1931–1949
    • Part II, The decolonisation process, 1950–1960 An overview
    • 4. The nationalist upsurge: the People's Committee in 1950
    • 5. Political conflict: scope and dimensions
    • 6. The conflict: the climax and resolution
    • Part III. Towards independence, 1961–1974
    • 7. An overview
    • 8. Constitutional advance and imbroglio
    • 9. Political parties and the political process
    • 10. Multiple external orientations: sentiment and reality
    • Conclusion: decolonisation and national integration.
      Author
    • C. H. Grant , University of Waterloo, Ontario