Monday 18 August 2008

I AM JAMAICAN!!!!

1, 2, 2...counting order change!!

Over the past two days, who would not be proud to be Jamaican? You cannot believe what a boost it has been to me, the only Jamaican here on campus...I am sure all around my dorm people must have been wondering what was happening with that girl for all the screaming I did yesterday!! Usain Bolt has lifted our heads high by his scintilating performance ...world record and olympic champion. Sorry about Asafa but there is hope for relay gold. And what can I say about the girls? They just brought it home! 1,2,2!!! I don't think that has ever happened in the olympics not to mention how the american were shut out! I am so happy! Let us just take this good news to raise our country higher...we little but we talawa!
That girl, that girl Shelly Ann!

The Bolt himself!!



Pray for all the other athletes that the achievements of the previous ones will inspire them to pull out all the stops and produce our best olympic result ever!

Monday 11 August 2008

HOPE


Beautiful!!!


Yesterday while I was about to cook dinner, I looked out the kitchen window and saw my first Norwich rainbow. It was there just for a few moments then it was gone. But what a blessing those few moments were at that very point in time. It reminded me that I am not here alone....that there is indeed hope. I will complete my task because God says so. I am closer than I think to the end than I was at the beginning!

Friday 8 August 2008

Last Lap

Trying to get something on screen... I will be very happy when I don't feel tied to a computer!
In the new 'rabbit hutch' trying to distill thoughts from all these papers and books!!



It really is the last lap. I am just about done! It seems though that the closer it comes the harder it gets. The dissertation has had me going. My thoughts are varied... going in many directions still not too concrete. That is the hardest part, watching the time go by without finding my way. I keep hope though because I believe that God is with me and he has brought me to this place and is more than able to finish the good work that he has started in me.

If you guys recall I am doing a comparative analysis of the employment dispute resolution mechanisms of the UK and Jamaica. This will look at methods used in collective disputes (those involving trade unions and employers) and individual disputes involving non-unionised workers and employers. The position in the UK is that trade union representation has dwindled in the wake of hostile government policies between 1980 - 1997, the Thatcher years. That in turn has led to less usage of collective mechanisms simply because there is not so much need for them and the perennial ethos of volunteerism in British Industrial Relations is still strong. Concurrently there has been the extraordinary growth of individual employment rights given to workers by statute and the provision of the Employment Tribunal system for enforcing these rights. This has eclipsed the role of the trade unions to a great degree while putting tremendous pressure on government resources to provide them.


In Jamaica we have almost the direct opposite. Our Industrial Relations is built on Trade Unions which are of course umbilically linked to politics. Like the UK the Jamaican government provides assistance in resolving collective disputes in the form of conciliation and arbitration (IDT) and there is still a strong emphasis on volunteerism in Industrial Relations. Unlike the UK, however there was no conscious government effort to thwart unionism. Yet in the wake of capitalism and globalisation their power and influence has waned. Thus though the collective mechanisms exist, and their usage by the unions remain, the segment of the working populace that has the benefit thereof is diminishing. Importantly while non-unionised persons in the UK have been granted protection by more and more legislation giving employment rights, Jamaica has remained stagnant. True there are certain basic rights provided by statute but the crux of the matter is there is no dedicated dispute resolution mechanism provided for the enforcement of these rights rudimentary as they are. The IDT is not accessible to non-unionised persons, only unionised persons may approach. Where does that leave that 80% of Jamaica's non-represented workforce?


Well let me get back to it... and try to make all of what I just said coherent! Remember to keep praying for me and all of us trying to finish work like this. I am really ready to get done and go home right now.

Monday 4 August 2008

Celebrating Jamaica's Emancipation & Independence - London Style

Friday the 1st August was a holiday in Jamaica - then we celebrated the date when slavery was abolished back in 1834. On the 6th August we will celebrate the birth of our nation, Jamaica's Independence day. It will be the 46th anniversary of the date. A church service of praise and thanksgiving was held at the St. Martin-in-the-Field church, Trafalgar Square in the heart of London on Saturday August 2, 2008, which I had the pleasure of attending. It was a 'sold out' occasion whith the church which has a capacity to seat 825 having standing room only. We were priviledged to receive the Prime Minister's Independence message 4 days early, read by High Commissioner Burchell Whiteman. The sermon was excellent delivered by Reverend Jennifer Thomas, who was born in Jamaica. There were melodious songs from the London Seventh Day Adventist Male Voice Choir and the National Pledge said by children of the diaspora all bedecked in Bandana outfits. I also had the honour of showing my patriotism by being an usher/volunteer. I am so blessed to be a part of a warm country...I keep praying that the situation at home will improve... very soon.
Me with the JDF Cadets who were the flag bearers; they did an excellent job.High Commissioner and Mrs. Whiteman with the children of the Diaspora



On Sunday August 3, I also attended a Funday at Chrystal Palace which was in aid of the Jamiaca Basic School Foundation. It was also again a blessing to see so many people identifying with being Jamaican and I 'buck up' a few friends and family... I pray that this gives me some impetus to really get going on the dissertation that so far has been eluding me...again your earnest prayers are requested. Anneke, Adenekie and the Nigerian Chika...all attending LSE.The Cast of The Harder They Come - the musical was in attendance and performed .... I plan to go and see it before I go home in SeptemberMe, Gail and 'wiggle'...yes she in happily in the 'family way' The lovebirds Anneke and Andrew
Fate... I saw David Fraser and his brood. Aren't they tooo cute?Enjoying some cotton candy on the fair grounds