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CARIB | Nov 1, 2023

Former BBC anchor Trevelyan appointed associate fellow at P.J. Patterson Institute for African Caribbean Advocacy

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Laura Trevelyan

The PJ Patterson Institute for Africa Caribbean Advocacy has announced the appointment of Laura Trevelyan as an associate fellow.

In this role, Trevelyan will assist the institute in mobilising funding “to strengthen the Institute’s role as a significant advocacy organisation capable of facilitating positive change, extending its outreach in the global space and strengthening ties between the motherland and the diaspora “, P.J. Patterson, statesman-in-residence at the Institute, has said.

He noted that “at this stage special attention is being devoted to funding and sustainability, strengthening the human resources/technical expertise to support the work and building of a global sphere of influence through high quality research, publications, seminars and workshops”.

Trevelyan is a descendant of a prominent British family who owned more than 1,000 slaves on a plantation in Grenada. On learning this, she quit her job as a BBC anchor and United Nations correspondent. She and her family made a public apology at a ceremony in Grenada in February 2023, and launched a fund for reparations with a donation of £100,000, towards education on the island. Trevelyan has also co-founded a group called “Heirs of Slavery” working with other British families whose ancestors profited from slavery “to amplify the voices of those already calling for reparations including Caribbean governments”.

Situated at The University of the West Indies, Mona, the PJ Patterson Institute for Africa Caribbean Advocacy aims to centralise and coordinate its relations with African peoples, governments, universities and institutions through a specialised institutional agreement.

In welcoming Trevelyan to the Institute, the former Jamaican prime minister congratulated her for “the principled position and gracious gesture of reparation taken by you and the Trevelyan family to the Government and people of Grenada. We also welcome your decision to step back from a significant role at the BBC to be a global advocate for reparative justice for the Caribbean”.

PJ Patterson

Patterson said that “in the face of an increasing array of existential threats to the lives and livelihoods of peoples on both sides of the Atlantic, there is an unequivocal need to strengthen, deepen and extend the social, cultural, psychological, economic and other connections between African and Caribbean peoples.

“To this end, the PJ Patterson Institute for Africa Caribbean Advocacy at The University of the West Indies was established in 2020 to become the hub for advocacy and facilitation in this area. As part of The UWI system, which includes several academic centres on the African continent, the institute seeks to access intellectual resources and research to support its advocacy role,” Patterson continued.

He said that “the Caribbean intellectual tradition is a profound one and it has made extensive contributions to the questions about being human and what that means for the world. Let us recognise the complexity of this tradition and also be attentive to its popular forms as we seek to transcend commercial and generational boundaries”.

Sir Hilary Beckles

Sir Hilary Beckles, vice-chancellor of The UWI, chairman of the CARICOM Reparations Committee and a member of the institute’s advisory board, said: “The Reparatory Justice Movement is grateful to the PJ Patterson Institute for Caribbean African Advocacy (UWI) for developing and hosting an Honorary Fellowship for reparations advocacy, which has attracted the inaugural occupancy by Laura Trevelyan who has been a pioneer in pursuing a strategy to bring heirs of slavery enrichment to the table of accountability.”

Reacting to the fellowship, Trevelyan said: “This is a tremendous honour, and I am extremely grateful to both former Prime Minister PJ Patterson and to Professor Sir Hilary Beckles for this unparalleled opportunity. I would like to thank them both for their intellectual leadership. As an associate fellow for Africa Caribbean advocacy, I hope to support the reparative justice agenda. I’ll do my best to help build on the global momentum towards healing and repair, as we finally begin to confront the legacies of transatlantic slavery, in Africa and in the Caribbean.”

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