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A Life
Of Service
The
Most Honourable Michael Manley was one of the most outstanding
political figures in the post-colonial history of the Caribbean. As
a politician, labour leader, author and intellectual, Mr Manley made
a seminal contribution to Jamaican, Caribbean and international
politics.
His pioneering legislative programme of social reforms in the 1970s
and his role in the formation of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM)
and later the Association of Caribbean States (ACS) guarantees him a
prominent place in modern Caribbean history. His advocacy of a New
International Economic Order (NIEO), his defence of sovereignty for
ex-colonial countries, and his leading role among world statesmen in
confronting racial oppression, especially in southern Africa, make
him an international figure of enormous consequence for world
politics during the decade of the 1970s.
A rounded man, he was an aficionado of sports and the arts, and in
his twilight years earned distinction as a coffee-farmer and
horticulturist, winning several awards for his roses.
Michael Manley was driven by a passionate concern for equality and
justice. Writing in 1975, he stated that in Jamaica "class relations
were stark in their intolerance. There was no subtlety and little
mobility because a man's class was stamped upon his skin as much as
upon his clothes. To middle-class eyes, the working classes were an
opaque mass, without individuality and without rights --because
they were without humanity." Michael Manley's public life was
dedicated to the reversal of this feature of Jamaican society.
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A Life Of Service
His
Early Life
Political Career
Recognition & Awards
Legacy
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