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Military Power and Popular Protest - The U.S.Navy in Vieques, Puerto Rico (Paperback)
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Military Power and Popular Protest - The U.S.Navy in Vieques, Puerto Rico (Paperback)
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"McCaffrey's outstanding analysis movingly narrates the community's
longstanding anguish and accurately situates the Vieques movement
in the larger context of U.S. military policy in the Caribbean and
Puerto Rico's unresolved status quandary. Those interested in
understanding the Vieques crisis will find Military Power and
Popular Protest an indispensible work." --Amilcar Antonio Barreto,
author of Vieques, the Navy, and Puerto Rican Politics Residents of
Vieques, a small island just off the east coast of Puerto Rico,
live wedged between an ammunition depot and live bombing range for
the U.S. Navy. Since the 1940s when the navy expropriated over
two-thirds of the island, residents have struggled to make a life
amid the thundering of bombs and the rumbling of weaponry fire.
Like the army's base in Okinawa, Japan, the facility has drawn
vociferous protests from residents who challenged U.S. security
interests overseas. In 1999, when a local civilian employee of the
base was killed by a stray bomb, Vieques again erupted in protests
that have mobilized tens of thousands of individuals and have
transformed this tiny Caribbean island into the setting for an
international cause celebre. Katherine T. McCaffrey gives a
complete analysis of the troubled relationship between the U.S.
Navy and island residents. She explores such topics as the history
of U.S. naval involvement in Vieques; a grassroots
mobilization--led by fisherman--that began in the 1970s; how the
navy promised to improve the lives of the island residents--and
failed; and the present-day emergence of a revitalized political
activism that has effectively challenged naval hegemony. Military
bases overseas act as lightning rods for anti-American sentiment,
thus threatening his country's image and interests abroad. By
analyzing this particular, conflicted relationship, the book also
explores important lessons about colonialism and postcolonialism
and the relationship of the United States to the countries in which
it maintains military bases. Katherine T. McCaffrey is an assistant
professor of anthropology at Montclair State University, New
Jersey.
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