- Besson, Jean. 2018. Review of In the forests of freedom: the fighting Maroons of Dominica by Lennox Honychurch. Slavery & Abolition, 39(2), pp. 442-444. ISSN 0144-039X
- Besson, Jean. 2016. Review of Ties that bind: the black family in post-slavery Jamaica, 1834-1882 by Jenny M. Jemmott. New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids, 90(3-4), pp. 334-335. ISSN 1382-2373
- Besson, Jean. 2014. Review of Enacting power: the criminalization of obeah in the Anglophone Caribbean, 1760-2011 by Jerome S. Handler and Kenneth M. Bilby. Slavery & Abolition: A Journal of Slave and Post-Slave Studies, 35(2), pp. 384-386. ISSN 0144-039X
- Besson, Jean. 2012. Review of Cultural DNA: gender at the root of everyday life in rural Jamaica by Diana. J. Fox. New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids, 86(3-4), pp. 381-384. ISSN 1382-2373
- Besson, Jean. 2010. Review of Down town ladies: informal commercial importers, a Haitian anthropologist, and self-making in Jamaica by Gina A. Ulysse. New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids, 84(3-4), pp. 315-318. ISSN 1382-2373
- Besson, Jean. 2009. Review of Jamaica in 1850 or, the effects of sixteen years of freedom on a slave colony by John Bigelow. New West Indian Guide/Nieuwe West-Indische Gids, 83(1-2), pp. 140-142. ISSN 1382-2373
- Besson, Jean. 2008. Review of The language of dress: resistance and accommodation in Jamaica, 1760-1890 by Steeve O. Buckridge. New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids, 80(3-4), pp. 265-267. ISSN 1382-2373
- Besson, Jean. 2007. Review of Negotiating Caribbean freedom: peasants and the state in development by Michaeline A. Crichlow. Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews, 36(4), pp. 360-361. ISSN 0094-3061
- Besson, Jean. 2004. L鈥檋茅ritage de l鈥檈sclavage: La m茅moire du sol en Jama茂que occidentale. Annales. Histoire, Sciences sociales, 59(3), pp. 569-587. ISSN 0395-2649
- Besson, Jean. 2004. Review of Jamaica in slavery and freedom: history, heritage and culture by Kathleen E. A. Monteith and Glen Richards, eds. New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids, 78(3-4), pp. 315-317. ISSN 1382-2373
- Besson, Jean. 2004. Periodization or Process? An Anthropological View of History. Journal of Victorian Culture, 9(2), pp. 244-250. ISSN 1355-5502
- Besson, Jean. 2003. Review of Civilising Subjects: Metropole and Colony in the English Imagination, 1830-1867 by Catherine Hall. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 9(4), pp. 796-797. ISSN 1359-0987
- Besson, Jean. 1999. Folk Law and Legal Pluralism in Jamaica: A View from the Plantation-Peasant Interface. The Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law, 43, pp. 31-56. ISSN 0732-9113
- Besson, Jean. 1997. Caribbean Common Tenures and Capitalism: The Accompong Maroons of Jamaica. Plantation Society in the Americas: an interdisciplinary journal of tropical and subtropical history and culture, 4(2 & 3), pp. 201-232. ISSN 0192-5059
- Besson, Jean and Chevannes, Barry. 1996. The Continuity-Creativity Debate: The Case of Revival. New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids, 70(3-4), pp. 209-228. ISSN 1382-2373
- Besson, Jean. 1995. The legacy of George L. Beckford鈥檚 plantation economy thesis in Jamaica. New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids, 69(1-2), pp. 111-119. ISSN 1382-2373
- Besson, Jean. 1995. Consensus in the family land controversy: rejoinder to Michaeline A. Crichlow. New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids, 69(3-4), pp. 299-304. ISSN 1382-2373
- Besson, Jean. 1992. Oral Tradition in Caribbean Research: Case Studies from Jamaica, Trinidad and Guyana. OPReP Newsletter, 18, pp. 3-6. ISSN 1013-1531
- Besson, Jean. 1984. Land tenure in the free villages of Trelawny, Jamaica: A case study in the Caribbean peasant response to emancipation. Slavery & Abolition, 5(1), pp. 3-23. ISSN 0144-039X
Professor Jean Besson MA PhD
Jean has researched in the Caribbean, publishing on cultural history, peasantry, land, law, development, kinship, gender, narratives, religion, migration and ethnicity.
Staff details
Jean Besson studied Social Anthropology at the University of Edinburgh (MA Honours 1967, PhD 1974) and taught at the Universities of Edinburgh (1974-76) and Aberdeen (1976-90) before teaching at 牛牛资源 from 1991-2014. In the 牛牛资源 Anthropology Department, she established courses on the ethnography and social anthropology of the Caribbean Region across a range of undergraduate and postgraduate degrees. She also contributed to the MA Applied Anthropology and Community and Youth Work and the University of London鈥檚 MA in Caribbean and Latin American Studies. In 2014, she gave the Annual Gold Lecture in Anthropology at 牛牛资源.
Jean has held visiting appointments at the University of the West Indies (Mona, Jamaica and St. Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago) and the Johns Hopkins University, USA, and is an Associate Fellow of the Institute of Latin American Studies, School of Advanced 牛牛资源, University of London and the Institute of the Americas, University College London.
A founding co-editor of the journal鈥Progress in Development Studies鈥(London: Arnold), Professor Besson has also served on the Editorial Board of the鈥Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies鈥痑nd as chair of the Society for Caribbean Studies in the UK, of which she is a founder member (1977) and (since 2010) an elected Honorary Life Member. She was an advisor to the Scottish Executive on census issues of ethnicity (2007), and an academic advisor and contributor to the British Empire and Commonwealth Museum鈥檚 exhibition 鈥楤reaking the Chains鈥 (2007-2009) commemorating the bicentenary of the abolition of the British transatlantic slave trade.
In 2024, Professor Besson served as a consultant to Transatlantic Trafficked Enslaved African Corrective Historical (TTEACH) Plaques for designing the 鈥楤lack Lives Matter鈥 plaque installed in Deptford Town Hall acknowledging the lives of Africans trafficked by Britain and their descendants consigned to chattel slavery. The plaque marks Deptford Town Hall as a Site of Conscience, supported by teaching and research at 牛牛资源.
Her recent book, Building Zion: Narratives and Strategies of Development in a Jamaican 鈥楽quatter鈥 Settlement (Kingston & Miami: Ian Randle Publishers, 2025), highlighting the development of 鈥榗aptured land鈥 in informal settlements, completes a trilogy of ethnographies based on research in Jamaica. Previous books in the ethnographic trilogy are Transformations of Freedom in the Land of the Maroons: Creolization in the Cockpits, Jamaica (Kingston & Miami: Ian Randle Publishers, 2016), which discusses maroons with sacred common land and Martha Brae鈥檚 Two Histories: European Expansion and Caribbean Culture-Building in Jamaica (Chapel Hill & London: University of North Carolina Press, 2002) focusing on post-slavery villages with 鈥榝amily land鈥.
Publications and research outputs
Book
- Besson, Jean. 2025. Building Zion: Narratives and Strategies of Development in a Jamaican 鈥楽quatter鈥 Settlement. Kingston, Jamaica: Ian Randle Publishers. ISBN 9789768339461
- Besson, Jean. 2016. Transformations of Freedom in the Land of the Maroons: Creolization in the Cockpits, Jamaica. Kingston and Miami: Ian Randle Publishers. ISBN 978-9766374082
- Besson, Jean. 2002. Martha Brae's Two Histories: European Expansion and Caribbean Culture-Building in Jamaica. Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0807827347
Edited Book
- Besson, Jean and Momsen, Janet, eds. 2007. Caribbean Land and Development Revisited. New York: Palgrave. ISBN 140397392X
- Besson, Jean and Olwig, Karen Fog, eds. 2005. Caribbean Narratives of Belonging: Fields of Relations, Sites of Identity. Oxford: Macmillan. ISBN 1405018798
- Besson, Jean and Momsen, Janet Henshall, eds. 1987. Land and Development in the Caribbean. London and Basingstoke: Macmillan. ISBN 0333454065
Book Section
- Besson, Jean. 2021. Free Villages. In: Diana Paton and Matthew J. Smith, eds. The Jamaica Reader: History, Culture, Politics. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press, pp. 163-167. ISBN 9781478011514
- Besson, Jean. 2011. Missionaries, planters, and slaves in the age of abolition. In: Stephan Palmi茅 and Francisco A Scarano, eds. The Caribbean: A history of the region and its peoples. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, pp. 317-329. ISBN 9780226645087
- Besson, Jean. 2011. M. G. Smith鈥檚 plural society theory and the challenge of Caribbean creolization. In: Brian Meeks, ed. Caribbean Reasonings: M. G. Smith: Social theory and anthropology in the Caribbean and beyond. Kingston and Miami: Ian Randle Publishers, pp. 22-42. ISBN 978-976-637-533-1
Article
- Besson, Jean. 2024. Review of The Workings of Diaspora: Jamaican Maroons and the Claims to Sovereignty, by Mario Nisbett. New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids, 98(1-2), pp. 226-227. ISSN 1382-2373
- Besson, Jean. 2018. Sidney W Mintz鈥檚 鈥榩easantry鈥 as a critique of capitalism: New evidence from Jamaica. Critique of Anthropology, 38(4), pp. 443-460. ISSN 0308-275X
- Besson, Jean. 2018. Review of Almost Home. Maroons between Slavery and Freedom in Jamaica, Nova Scotia, and Sierra Leone by Ruma Chopra. International Review of Social History, 63(3), pp. 526-529. ISSN 0020-8590
Conference or Workshop Item
- Besson, Jean. 2025. 'Building Zion: narratives and strategies of development in a Jamaican 鈥渟quatter鈥 settlement'. In: New Books Panel, 48th Annual Conference of the Society for Caribbean Studies. University of Bristol, United Kingdom 2 - 4 July, 2025.
- Besson, Jean. 2016. 'Transformations of freedom in the land of the Maroons: creolization in the Cockpits, Jamaica'. In: 40th Annual Conference of the Society for Caribbean Studies. University of Newcastle 6-8 July 2016 and to UCL institute of the Americas, 12 October 2016.
- Besson, Jean. 2015. 'Jamaican hidden histories in Caribbean context: maroons, free villages and 鈥榮quatter鈥 settlements'. In: Keynote Address. 39th Annual Conference of the Society for Caribbean Studies. The Drum Intercultural Arts Centre, Birmingham, United Kingdom 1-3 July 2015.
Research Interests
Professor Jean Besson has carried out research in Jamaica and the Eastern Caribbean, publishing on cultural history, post-slavery peasantries (free villages, informal settlements and maroons), land, law, development, kinship, gender, narratives, religion, migration and ethnicity.
Her recent book, Building Zion: Narratives and Strategies of Development in a Jamaican 鈥楽quatter鈥 Settlement (Kingston & Miami: Ian Randle Publishers, 2025), highlighting the development of 鈥榗aptured land鈥 in informal settlements, completes a trilogy of ethnographies based on research in Jamaica. Previous books in the ethnographic trilogy are Transformations of Freedom in the Land of the Maroons: Creolization in the Cockpits, Jamaica (Kingston & Miami: Ian Randle Publishers, 2016), which discusses maroons with common land and Martha Brae鈥檚 Two Histories: European Expansion and Caribbean Culture-Building in Jamaica (Chapel Hill & London: University of North Carolina Press, 2002) focusing on post-slavery villages with 鈥榝amily land鈥.
Together, these three ethnographies show that common land in maroon communities, family land in free villages, and captured land in squatter settlements are variants of customary tenures found across the Caribbean region. Such small-scale landholdings, rooted in community, kinship and a history of slave resistance (as opposed to being based on law), reflect dynamic processes of peasantization and Caribbean culture-building. These Afro-Creole tenures are transforming the legacy of the large-scale colonial slave-plantation system, rather than being obstacles to development as Eurocentric perspectives suggest.
Other publications include鈥Land and Development in the Caribbean, edited with Janet Momsen (London and Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1987); Caribbean Narratives of Belonging: Fields of Relations, Sites of Identity, edited with Karen Fog Olwig (Oxford: Macmillan, 2005);鈥Caribbean Land and Development Revisited, edited with Janet Momsen (New York: Palgrave, 2007); and several book chapters and journal articles (1979-2024).
Professor Besson has also presented approximately ninety invited papers, visiting lectures and keynote lectures at conferences, workshops and seminars in the UK (England and Scotland), Europe (Austria, Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden), the Caribbean (Barbados, Guadeloupe, Guyana, Jamaica and Trinidad & Tobago) and the USA over a period of fifty years from 1975-2025.