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Original Articles

INTRODUCTION: LOCALITY IN TODAY'S GLOBAL CARIBBEAN: SHIFTING ECONOMIES OF NATION, RACE, AND DEVELOPMENT

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Pages 1-18 | Received 20 Jan 2005, Accepted 27 Sep 2006, Published online: 07 Feb 2007
 

Notes

1. The editing of this special issue of Identities, as well as the writing and assembling of the introductory article, was shared equally by Karla Slocum and Deborah A. Thomas.

2. Although we have edited the statements, in each of the ‘pair's statements’ sections of this introduction, we note the original authors of those statements to credit their work.

3. The ‘Washington Consensus’ characterizes the method of fiscal, trade, and development practice favored by national and international economic development planners. For a brief but concise discussion of the rationale and critique of this economic ideology, see CitationChomsky 1998: 19–21.

4. ‘Hucksters’ are small-scale interisland traders in agricultural products found in the Eastern Caribbean. In other parts of the Caribbean, they may be called ‘higglers,’ ‘hawkers,’ or ‘machann.’

5. Originally, Jessica Montalvo (University of Texas-Austin) was to contribute an article on migration for this issue and, with Heather Horst, she helped author this pair's statement. Because of unexpected circumstances, Jessica was unable to participate in the collection. We want to acknowledge her contribution to the statement that appears in this issue.

6. Return migration itself is confused or conflated with a number of related migration practices (CitationKing 2000; CitationGmelch 1980). The shifting intention of migrants contributes, in part, to the confusion. For a discussion of return migration, see CitationKing 2000: 8; for repeat (or circular) migration, see CitationKearney 1995 and CitationAustin-Broos 1997; and for re‐migration see CitationBasch, Glick Schiller, and Szanton Blanc 1994 and CitationGuarnizo 1997.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Deborah A. Thomas

1

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