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Barbados Education
Barbados Population,
Education, and Cultural Activity
The
population of Barbados is (1990) 257,082. The average population density
of 572 persons per sq km (1482 per sq mi) is notably high considering
the predominantly rural agricultural character of the island. The annual
growth rate of the population during the 1970s and 1980s was kept below
1 percent by out-migration. The capital, largest city, and only seaport
is Bridgetown, with a population (1990) of 6720.
About
90 percent of the total population is black; the remaining portion is
composed of whites and persons of mixed racial descent. English is the
official language. More than 50 percent of the people are Anglicans;
other important faiths include various Protestant sects and Roman
Catholicism.
Education is free for children between the ages of 5 and 16. In the late
1980s approximately 31,700 pupils were enrolled in primary schools and
25,300 were enrolled in secondary schools. A campus of the University of
the West Indies was established at Bridgetown in 1963.
The culture of Barbados combines English institutions, which evolved
through more than three centuries of English rule, with a folk culture
of African origin. The music and dances of Barbados reflect more purely
the African heritage. The island has a museum and public library in
Bridgetown and two daily newspapers
Barbados, independent state and easternmost island of the West Indies.
It lies east of Saint Vincent in the Windward Islands of the Lesser
Antilles. The island is 34 km (21 mi) long and 23 km (14 mi) wide at its
widest part, and has a total area of 431 sq km (166 sq mi).
Land and Resources
Barbados is generally flat along the coast and hilly in the interior.
Mount Hillaby, the highest point, rises to 336 m (1104 ft). Coral
deposits form the surface of the island and are underlaid by sedimentary
rock. Barbados has no natural deepwater harbors and is largely
surrounded by coral reefs. The climate is tropical, tempered by sea
breezes; the mean annual temperature is about 26.1° C (about 79° F). A
rainy season prevails from June to December, with average annual
rainfall varying from 1000 mm (about 40 in) on the coast to 2300 mm
(about 90 in) on the central ridge. Hurricanes occasionally strike the
island. Wildlife is limited and includes hares, monkeys, mongooses, tree
frogs, and various species of birds. Barbados lacks mineral resources,
and nearly all the natural vegetation has been cleared for cultivation.
.
Government
Under the constitution of 1966, legislative power is vested in a
parliament consisting of an upper house, the Senate, and a lower house,
the House of Assembly. The Senate has 21 government-appointed members;
the 27 members of the House of Assembly are elected by universal
suffrage (all citizens over the age of 18). The British monarch,
nominally the head of state, is represented by a governor-general who
presides over a privy council appointed after consultation with the
prime minister. A cabinet, composed of the prime minister and other
ministers responsible to the parliament, directs and controls the
government.
Economy
The economy of Barbados has traditionally been dependent on the growing
of sugarcane and the production and export of refined sugar, molasses,
and rum. Sugarcane is grown principally on large estates rather than on
small farms; the annual harvest in the late 1980s totaled 720,000 metric
tons. Efforts have been made by the government to reduce the dependency
on sugarcane products. Manufactures include clothing, furniture,
electric and electronic equipment, and plastic items. Newly discovered
reserves of petroleum and natural gas are being exploited. Fishing has
also increased in importance. Tourist facilities have been developed,
and since the late 1960s tourism has earned more foreign revenue than
sugar products. Budget revenues total about $420 million, expenditures
about $500 million.
The island is well served by roads, of which some 1475 km (some 915 mi)
are paved. An international airport is located at Seawell in the
southeast. The artificial deepwater harbor of Bridgetown was opened in
1961. In 1972 a central bank was established and a new unit of currency
adopted, the Barbados dollar (2.01 Barbados dollars equal U.S.$1; 1990).
History
Portuguese explorers probably landed on Barbados in the 16th century,
but the first settlement was not established until 1627 and then by
English colonists. It was made a Crown possession in 1663. The
prosperity of the colony was gravely affected during the 18th century by
war between the French and the British and by the American Revolution.
Slavery on the island was abolished in 1834, leading to a substantial
increase in agricultural production.
Severe riots, resulting in bloodshed and loss of property, occurred in
1876, when the British government proposed a confederation of Barbados
and the Windward Islands, about 160 km (about 100 mi) to the west. In
the following decades the African and mixed majority slowly rose to
political power, eventually outnumbering the white landholders in the
legislature.
In 1937 poor economic conditions caused serious unrest, and a British
Royal Commission was sent to Barbados. As a result, social and political
reforms were gradually introduced, and in 1950 universal adult suffrage
was achieved. Barbados joined the Federation of the West Indies
(1958-1962), which also included Trinidad and Tobago.
Barbados gained full internal self-government in 1961, and it became an
independent state in the Commonwealth of the Nations on November 30,
1966. The country is a member of the United Nations and of the
Organization of American States. In 1973 Barbados helped form the
Caribbean Community, an organization that promotes social and political
cooperation and economic integration. Barbados has enjoyed a stable
democratic government, and a transfer of power between the two major
political parties—the first since 1961—was peacefully achieved in 1976.
The election of 1986 reversed the position of the parties in the
assembly, and Errol Barrow of the Democratic Labor party became prime
minister. When Barrow died in June 1987, Erskine Sandiford succeeded
him. A Barbadian proposal on regional security received favorable
consideration by neighboring states in 1991.
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