Dominica

Dominica

Caribbean island stateClimate-resilience actorTourism economySmall-state diplomacy actor

CountryIntelligence profileCivic 6.2/10

A Caribbean island state known for climate-resilience diplomacy after severe hurricane damage and dependence on tourism, remittances, and external finance.

How this score is built: We rate five areas from 0 to 10, then take the average.

Public impact

7.0/10

Provisional baseline for country entities without linked article coverage yet.

Institutional power

9.0/10

Provisional baseline for country entities without linked article coverage yet.

Evidence reliability

5.0/10

Provisional baseline for country entities without linked article coverage yet.

Harm risk

5.0/10

Provisional baseline for country entities without linked article coverage yet.

Accountability

5.0/10

Provisional baseline for country entities without linked article coverage yet.

Civic score breakdown

OAP rubric dimensions (0–10) averaged from linked coverage.

  • Public impact7
  • Institutional power9
  • Evidence reliability5
  • Harm risk5
  • Accountability5

Current OAP lens

A Caribbean island state known for climate-resilience diplomacy after severe hurricane damage and dependence on tourism, remittances, and external finance.

Governance
sovereign / small-state governance
Strategic posture
sovereignty management / external partnership
Economic model
services, tourism, finance, remittances, or resource niches
Current stress
medium
Reality stability
mixed
Primary situations
climate exposure, fiscal resilience, sovereignty, external alignment, regulatory legitimacy

Visual overview

Profile at a glance

Institutional stress

Count of stress indicators by severity level in the OAP dossier.

  • High3 · 43%
  • Medium4 · 57%

Power map balance

Relative weight of each power-center category (by listed actors).

  • Political center3
  • Security apparatus3
  • Economic pillars5
  • External partners4
  • Pressure points5

Timeline event types

How historical milestones cluster by event type.

  • Institutional2
  • Economic1
  • Humanitarian1

Knowledge vs uncertainty

Known facts, open questions, and watchlist items in this profile.

  • What we know4 · 29%
  • What we don't know4 · 29%
  • What to watch6 · 43%

Key facts

Population
small population; refresh from World Bank / national statistical sources
Capital
refresh from country metadata source
Political system
small-state or special-status governance structure
Nuclear status
non-nuclear-armed polity
Core economic base
services, tourism, public sector, remittances or finance, resource niches where applicable
Key exports
tourism services, financial or business services, agricultural, fisheries, or resource exports where applicable
Current strategic focus
climate resilience, fiscal sustainability, institutional capacity, regulatory credibility, and external partnership management

Core economic base

Core sectors in the economic base (equal weight for scanability).

  • services1 · 20%
  • tourism1 · 20%
  • public sector1 · 20%
  • remittances or finance1 · 20%
  • resource niches where applicable1 · 20%

Key exports

Major export categories (equal weight for scanability).

  • tourism services1 · 33%
  • financial or business services1 · 33%
  • agricultural, fisheries, or resource exports where applicable1 · 33%

Baseline facts should be refreshed from World Bank WDI/DataBank where available, IMF WEO for macro context where applicable, and national or administering-state statistical sources for territories and special-status polities.

Active situations

Active situations involving Dominica

  • Small-state climate resilience
  • Tourism and external-shock exposure
  • Financial regulation and transparency
  • Migration and labor-market dependence
  • Regional security and external partnership

Strategic lenses

Sovereignty management

Small polities often convert limited scale into diplomatic flexibility, legal specialization, or strategic partnership.

External dependence

Tourism, aid, remittances, security guarantees, or administering-state ties can stabilize the polity while limiting autonomy.

Regulatory credibility

Financial centers and special jurisdictions depend heavily on trust, compliance, and reputation.

Institutional capacity

Small administrations must handle complex global pressures with limited human and fiscal resources.

OAP assessment

OAP assessment

Dominica is best understood through the OAP small-state lens: limited scale does not mean limited strategic relevance. Its governance depends on how effectively institutions manage external dependence, climate exposure, fiscal constraints, regulatory credibility, and relationships with larger powers.

The central tension is that small jurisdictions often have high exposure to shocks they did not create — climate events, financial regulation shifts, tourism volatility, commodity cycles, migration pressures, or great-power competition — while having limited administrative and fiscal buffers.

Timeline

Significant events

How the situation evolved — an interpretive civic sequence, not a full chronology.

  1. Institutionalmedium confidence

    Modern constitutional status takes shape

    Defines the sovereignty, autonomy, or external-association structure that still shapes policy space.

    Why it mattersDefines the sovereignty, autonomy, or external-association structure that still shapes policy space.

  2. Institutionalmedium confidence

    Climate, finance, and geopolitical pressures intensify

    Small jurisdictions face simultaneous pressure from climate adaptation, fiscal sustainability, migration, and strategic competition.

    Why it mattersSmall jurisdictions face simultaneous pressure from climate adaptation, fiscal sustainability, migration, and strategic competition.

  3. Economicmedium confidence

    Global financial crisis tests small-jurisdiction exposure

    Highlights vulnerability to external financial cycles and regulatory scrutiny.

    Why it mattersHighlights vulnerability to external financial cycles and regulatory scrutiny.

  4. Humanitarianmedium confidence

    Climate and pandemic shocks expose resilience gaps

    Shows how tourism, supply chains, health capacity, and disaster preparedness interact in small polities.

    Why it mattersShows how tourism, supply chains, health capacity, and disaster preparedness interact in small polities.

Power map

Political center

  • executive government
  • legislature or local assembly
  • judiciary or constitutional authority

Security apparatus

  • police
  • coast guard or maritime authorities
  • external defense partner where applicable

Economic pillars

  • tourism
  • services
  • public sector
  • finance or resources where applicable
  • external transfers

External partners

  • regional organizations
  • major trade partners
  • administering or compact partner where applicable
  • international financial institutions

Pressure points

  • climate shocks
  • tourism volatility
  • debt and fiscal space
  • regulatory scrutiny
  • migration and labor dependence

Institutional stress

High

  • Climate and disaster resilience
  • Fiscal capacity
  • External economic dependence

Medium

  • Regulatory credibility
  • Infrastructure resilience
  • Skilled workforce retention
  • Political trust

Small states and special-status polities often face concentrated exposure to external shocks while having limited fiscal and administrative buffers.

Core tradeoffs

  • Sovereignty vs external support
  • Tourism growth vs ecological resilience
  • Financial openness vs regulatory scrutiny
  • Climate adaptation vs fiscal limits
  • Migration dependence vs social cohesion

Epistemic clarity

What we know

  • Small scale can create agility but also high shock exposure.
  • External partnerships are central to resilience.
  • Climate and tourism risks often dominate long-term planning.
  • Regulatory credibility can become a strategic asset.

What we don't know

  • How fast climate adaptation can be financed.
  • Whether economic diversification will reduce tourism or finance dependence.
  • How external partners will behave during major shocks.
  • Whether young and skilled workers will remain locally.

OAP watchlist

What to watch

  • Climate-adaptation financing
  • Tourism recovery and volatility
  • Debt sustainability
  • Regulatory blacklisting or compliance pressure
  • Migration flows
  • External security or constitutional negotiations

Reader learning

Learn Dominica through 5 questions

  1. How do small states exercise influence?
  2. Why does climate risk matter differently for island polities?
  3. How can tourism dependence become a vulnerability?
  4. What makes a financial center legitimate?
  5. How do external partnerships protect and constrain sovereignty?

Latest OAP analysis involving Dominica

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