Challenges to Civil Society: Popular Protest & Governance in Jamaica
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Challenges to Civil Society: Popular Protest & Governance in ...

Chapter 1:  Jamaican Governance and Citizen Politics in Context
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The crisis is national in character, because it affects not only the institutions of the state, but the private sector and civil society as well. The old, non-inclusive, often undemocratic methods of power-sharing and managing power that evolved in post-independence Jamaica can be found across the entire spectrum of the society. We find them in political parties, the Parliament, the Cabinet, church organizations, the bureaucracy, organs of the state, private sector firms, community groups. We must change our approach to governance, or we will become part of the problem to be swept aside by the emerging new social order. (Patterson, 1999, as cited in Franklyn, 2004, p. 278)

I will illustrate in this book that the Jamaican populace, often angered by what many people construe as political indifference and insensitivity, responds with violent expressions of popular protest. Though political dissatisfaction is often reflected in voter downturn, it is increasingly and explicitly being expressed through popular protest—roadblocks, picketing, arson, vandalism, police-citizen clashes, mushrooming levels of crime (particularly homicides), the lyrical verbalizing by a multitude of reggae artistes, and the almost constant maligning of the political class in the popular press (“Gangs Set Barricades,” 2010; Gray, 2004; “Letter of the Day—Beware of the Don,” 2006; “Under Fire,” 2005; “Willing to Die,” 2010; Meeks, 2000; Munroe, 1999). The overall picture of the state and civil society in Jamaica as contending forces that are seemingly unable to coexist comfortably with each other can look discouraging enough to trigger doubts as to whether the country is governable at all.

The current scholarly focus seems to end with the nature of state governance. Yet, citizen behavioral norms are inevitably implicated in the construction of new theoretical contours of governance and therefore warrant both empirical and theoretical attention. For example, exploring the extent to which criminal actors and other uncivil citizens are affecting the less tangible aspects of statehood such as authority and legitimacy is the current trend in the existing political writing on Jamaica (C. Charles, 2002; Figueroa & Sives, 2003; Gray, 2004; Harriott, 2000, 2003; Rapley,