Haitian Democracy Restored 1991 -- 1995
By Roland I. Perusse
Lanham, Maryland, University Press of America, 1995
142 pages and 20 pages of Appendix documents
ISBN # 0-8191-9951-6 (hard bound)
ISBN # 0-8191-9952-4 (paper back)
Reviewed by Bob Corbett
November, 1996
Roland I. Perusse has created an extraordinary document, not so much a
book or study of the coup-to-restoration period, as a print documentary of
this period. Perusse follows the day by day developments from the night of
September 29, 1991 until October 15, 1994, when Aristide was once again back
in Haiti and, ostensibly, in charge of the country. Each major event in the
movement from coup to restoration and central events inside that drama, are
detailed and treated in separate chronological sections.
Perusse is not a completely uninvolved by-stander. He is clearly a
partisan of Aristide. Yet his partisanship does not enter much into the
book, and he is even at pains to several times indicate that Aristide has
failings to. For example he comments more than once that Aristide is not an
ideal democrat. In another place he says of Aristide's relationship to the
elite "...his rhetoric was inflammatory and bordered on a call for class
warfare." (p. 120)
Despite the criticisms, the thrust of this study is that Aristide was the
duly elected president of the nation, that he was Haiti's best hope for
growing in democracy, economy, social justice and peace. That the coup
d'etat was unjust, and that the story of the three years of disrupted
government is a tale into itself. It is that tale that Perusse tells so very
well.
Structurally the book is chronologically arranged and each small section
is treated in a special headlined section. For example, chapter two,
ARISTIDE'S FIRST EIGHT MONTHS, has the following sections:
- the inauguration
- reforms and accomplishments
- discontent rises
- the coup of September 30, 1991
- evaluation of the first eight months
In each section but the final evaluative one, Perusse recounts the events
of the time with a great deal of personal restraint and objectivity. In each
chapter there are sections of evaluation, but he clearly marks and names
these, warning the reader that he puts those sections forward on a different
footing that the other sections.
Perhaps the most interesting chapter of the entire book is the last,
entitled LESSONS IN CONFLICT RESOLUTION. Perusse recounts what
measures the international community uses, and in each mini-section he has a
few paragraphs set aside to evaluate that more of conflict resolution in
this particular case -- the restoration of Aristide. These tactics are:
- use of conventional diplomacy
- use of embargoes and sanctions
- protection of human rights (both in Haiti and of refugees)
- use of coercive diplomacy
- use of unofficial envoys
- assertive multilateralism
Perusse's summary evaluation is that ultimately only coercive diplomacy
and assertive multilateralism had much real impact, the other strategies
tended to fail and push the international community two these two more
aggressive tactics.
This is a very useful small book. It is likely to become the
guide to this period. It isn't detailed, no profound, nor
particularly partisan. The layout is clear and useful. It invites the user
to work section by section where he or she might assemble further materials,
add depth here or there, or even find topics of interest which Perusse has
missed. However it is used, it has the virtue of being well organized,
seemingly complete, clearly laid out and mainly neutral. It would make an
exceptional discussion guide for an investigation of this period, and
perhaps I'll introduce such a study at a future time using this work as a
guide.
I was most surprised to see that it was by Roland I. Perusse. He wrote
the HISTORICAL DICTIONARY OF HAITI in 1977, some 18 years before
this book. Then he seems to have disappeared from publishing in English,
though in that time he has become an American citizen. There are striking
similarities between the book under review and the dictionary. Both are
relatively complete, guides more than studies, quite neutral and not
particular deep or full studies, but suggestive of where to go next. This is
a useful talent and I welcome this new book of Perusse.
If you want this book my suggestion is get it now! When
I ordered it, the hard bound, which I preferred for my library, was already
out of print, and the only the paper back was in print, and that seemed
uncertain. Perusse's HISTORICAL DICTIONARY OF HAITI went out of
print quickly and is extremely difficult to find, one of the books that I do
not even own in my library that is on my list of most sought after books.
So, lest you be in that position in the future with this book, get it now!
Editor's Note: (9/5/99) Corbett recently acquired this book.