Notes on Contributors

AuthorPeter Clegg/Emilio Pantojas-García
ProfessionSenior lecturer of politics and international relations at the University of the West of England, Bristol/Political sociologist and has published widely on Caribbean economic development
Pages277-280
277
- CONTRIBUTORS -
Notes on contributors
Matthew Bishop teaches courses in International Political Economy and
Development in the Department of Politics at the University of Sheffield.
His PhD research was a comparison of post-colonial development in the
Anglophone and Francophone Caribbean, and he has conducted extensive
fieldwork in the region. He has also written on the problematic nature of
Caribbean tourism.
Peter Clegg is senior lecturer of Politics and International Relations at the
University of the West of England, Bristol. He has published widely on the
international political economy of the Caribbean, and the territories of the
non-sovereign Caribbean. He has also provided advice on the Caribbean to
the British Government and the OECD.
Carlyle Corbin is an international advisor on governance, and former Minister
for External Affairs for the US Virgin Islands. He has served as a United
Nations (UN) expert on self-determination, and is the author of two UN
studies on non-independent countries. He has been a constitutional advisor
to the Anguilla Government, and independent expert to UN missions to
Bermuda and the Turks and Caicos Islands. He is senior editor of Overseas
Territories Review.
Justin Daniel is professor of Political Science at the University of the French
Antilles and French Guyane. He is currently the dean of the Faculty of Law
and Economics in Martinique. He previously served as the director of the
Centre of Research on Local Powers in the Caribbean. His research interests
focus on political systems and political mobilisation in the Caribbean, and
on politics in the French overseas territories. He has written extensively on
these topics for academic journals and books. He presently works on the
phenomena of identity assertions within Caribbean societies and Caribbean
migrants in the metropoles.

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