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Einband grossEuro-Caribbean Societies in the 21st Century
ISBN/GTIN

Euro-Caribbean Societies in the 21st Century

E-BookPDF0 - No protectionE-Book
214 Seiten
Englisch
Taylor & Franciserschienen am16.05.20181. Auflage
This volume examines political, economic and social change, and inter-group relations in the European islands of the Caribbean over the last decade, addressing the major institutional transformations of recent years as the impacts of wider global change - economic transformations, roles of the local elites, and the current dynamics of inequality.mehr
Verfügbare Formate
E-BookEPUB0 - No protectionE-Book
EUR53,99
E-BookPDF0 - No protectionE-Book
EUR53,99

Produkt

KlappentextThis volume examines political, economic and social change, and inter-group relations in the European islands of the Caribbean over the last decade, addressing the major institutional transformations of recent years as the impacts of wider global change - economic transformations, roles of the local elites, and the current dynamics of inequality.
Details
Weitere ISBN/GTIN9781351248860
ProduktartE-Book
EinbandartE-Book
FormatPDF
Format Hinweis0 - No protection
Erscheinungsjahr2018
Erscheinungsdatum16.05.2018
Auflage1. Auflage
Seiten214 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
Dateigrösse2385 Kbytes
Illustrationen3 schwarz-weiße Zeichnungen, 11 schwarz-weiße Tabellen
Artikel-Nr.4381610
Rubriken
Genre9200

Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
Introduction - Offshore Europe on the move

Sébastien Chauvin, Peter Clegg and Bruno Cousin

Part I: Institutional, Political and Regulatory Processes: The transformation of relations with the metropolitan states, the EU, and the international community

1 The British Overseas Territories in the Caribbean and their quest for further autonomy

Peter Clegg

2 Status Change in the Caribbean part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands: What for?

Lammert de Jong and Ron van der Veer

3 The French Caribbean between egalitarian aspirations and identity assertions: Towards a realisation of difference?

Justin Daniel

4 From Brussels with love: Shifting governance and the evolution of 'Overseas Europe'

Matthew Louis Bishop and Genève Phillip

5 Brexit and the Overseas Territories: Repercussions for the periphery

Peter Clegg

6 Global financial governance and the Euro-Caribbean overseas territories: First and second order effects for offshore finance

William Vlcek

Part II: Economic Transformations, Local Elites and the Current Dynamics of Inequality

7 Colonial heritages and continuities in Guadeloupe and Martinique: An economic perspective

Guy Numa

8 A postcolonial economy? Protesters, lobbyists and small-business-owners in Martinique after 2009

Audrey Célestine

9 French Guiana - A 'Plural Society' in a post-colonial context

Gérard Collomb and Edenz Maurice

10 Deconstructing development: immigration, society and economy in early 21st century Cayman

Roy Bodden

11 Sub-elites as fiduciary gatekeepers of global elites: A fiscal anthropology of the Cayman Islands as an offshore financial centre

May Hen

12 Integration with the Metropolis: The Dutch Caribbean 'municipalities' after 2010

Wouter Veenendaal

13 Intimacy and integration: The ambivalent achievement of marriage equality in the Dutch Caribbean, 2007-12

Chelsea Schields
mehr

Autor

Sébastien Chauvin is a sociologist and an associate professor at the Institut des Sciences Sociales at the University of Lausanne, Switzerland. His research has dealt with immigration, citizenship, gender, sexuality, law and labour in France and the USA. With Bruno Cousin, he has also developed a multi-sited research programme on social and symbolic capital and the cultural sociology of economic élites, with a focus on Western Europe (élite male social club sociability), the Caribbean region (Saint-Barthélemy), and new forms of conspicuous consumption among the global super-rich. His other ongoing writing explores the intersections of race, nationalism, sexuality and citizenship in the Netherlands, France and the USA.

Peter Clegg is Associate Professor in Politics and Head of the Department of Health and Social Sciences at the University of the West of England, Bristol, UK. He was formerly Visiting Research Fellow at both KITLV/Royal Netherlands Institute of South East Asian and Caribbean Studies, Leiden, Netherlands, and at the Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social and Economic Studies (SALISES), University of the West Indies, Jamaica. His main research interests focus on contemporary developments within the United Kingdom Overseas Territories and the international political economy of the Caribbean.




Bruno Cousin is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Sciences Po and an affiliate of the Centre of European Studies and Comparative Politics (CEE), France. Previously, he was Assistant Professor at the University of Lille, France, and Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Harvard University, USA, and has held visiting positions at NYU, the University of Amsterdam and Birkbeck. His research interests focus on class relations, residential segregation, social capital and forms of bourgeois sociability, and the modes of élites' legitimization. He is currently conducting research with Sébastien Chauvin on Saint-Barthélemy (French West Indies), whose first results have been published in Ethnologie française and Geographies of the Super-Rich (2013), and he has recently co-authored Ce que les riches pensent des pauvres (2017).
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