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Professor
Barbara Evelyn Bailey, Jamaican by birth and
a Caribbean woman by disposition, has
distinguished herself as an educator and as
an advocate of gender equality and equity in
the Caribbean Community and beyond. She has
done so primarily through her teaching and
research at the University of the West
Indies and through unstinting public service
at both national and regional levels. Her
service to her country and the region and in
particular, women’s empowerment has been
undertaken not only within the confines of
academia, and the public service but
extended its reach to the community level,
where as a committed Christian woman, she
ensured that her skills and talents in the
area of advocacy and women’s empowerment
were made available for use in the service
of the Church at national, regional and
international levels. |
This eminent scholar reached the pinnacle of her
academic career in 2003, when she was appointed
Professor, Gender & Education, having served as
University Director of the Regional Coordinating
Unit of the Centre for Gender & Development Studies,
University of the West Indies from 1995. Professor
Bailey received her academic training at the
University College of the West Indies, and later at
the University of the West Indies, where she read
for Bachelor of Science Degrees in Botany & Zoology,
and Medical Microbiology and Masters and Doctoral
degrees in Education. She has served her Alma Mater
with distinction in several capacities over the past
twenty-eight years.
Professor Bailey is a prolific researcher and writer.
She has authored and edited numerous books and
articles in refereed journals and has presented
papers at several academic conferences and policy
oriented meetings. Her abiding interest in
educational development within the region is
reflected in her research profile, with the majority
of her publications centering on issues related to
gender and education. One of her most critical
pieces of research is that on Gender Differentials
in education which examines the underlying issues
related to what is now manifested in growing gaps in
participation and performance between boys and girls
in education. Her work in this area aims at
improving the understanding of gender and its impact
on the educational process and education outputs.
Her research also encompass gender based violence,
gender disparities within the CARICOM Single Market
and Economy (CSME), micro enterprise development,
gender ideology and pedagogy including feminist
pedagogical theory.
Professor Bailey has a clear entrepreneurial bent
having succeeded in mobilizing substantial sums for
Gender projects. She was formally recognized by the
University for this when, in 2007 she was awarded
the Principal’s Research Award for the Research
Project Attracting the Most Research Funds. In that
same year, she also received the Principal’s
Research Award for The Research Project with the
Greatest Business/Economic/Development Impact for a
Research Project in Gender Training and Research.
Professor Bailey’s tireless research efforts have
served to provide sound policy advice to the
Government of Jamaica as well as to the Region on
matters related to gender and women's rights. She
has represented the Government of Jamaica at
regional and international conferences since 1985
when the United Nations World Conference to Review
the Achievements of the United Nations Decade for
Women, was held in Nairobi, Kenya, and since 2004,
has chaired the National Gender Advisory Committee,
mandated to develop a strategic and comprehensive
policy for achieving gender equality and social
justice and provide direction, coordination,
integration and monitoring of gender mainstreaming
activities of the Government of Jamaica. She was
appointed the representative to the Meeting of the
Committee of Experts on Violence (CEVI) of the
Inter-American Commission of Women, Organization of
American States, July 2007 in Buenos Aires,
Argentina.
Professor Bailey has given yeoman service to the Region
and has been integrally involved in the work of the
Council for Human and Social Development (COHSOD).
She has served in an advisory capacity on the
Regional Advisory Committee on Gender and
Development, a Task Force co-chaired by CARICOM and
UNIFEM, and also as a Member of the CARICOM Task
Force on Gender Mainstreaming. The Region has
benefitted from Professor Bailey's expertise as she
served as consultant to several CARICOM led projects
and activities such as Consultant to Caribbean
Community (CARICOM) Secretariat at the Twenty-Third
Special Session of the General Assembly entitled
Women 2000: gender equality, development and peace
for the twenty-first century, United Nations
Headquarters, New York, June 2000, and Consultant to
Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Secretariat at the
Eighth Session of the Regional Conference on Women
in Latin America and the Caribbean, Lima, Peru. She
has also made significant contribution to capacity
building of the Gender Bureau throughout the Region.
The work that Barbara Evelyn Bailey has undertaken and
has pursued so passionately, has in no small way
assisted Caribbean countries to achieve national and
international development goals including their
commitments to the Convention for the Elimination of
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), the Convention
on the Rights of the Child (CRC) and the Millennium
Development Goals, especially promoting gender
equality and the empowerment of women. She joins a
group of select women who have made significant
contributions at the national and regional level in
various fields of endeavour that have impacted
positively on the social and economic development of
the Community.
When Professor Bailey's achievements are considered
against the background of the challenges that many
women face in combining their productive,
reproductive and community management roles, her
contribution looms even larger. Over the years, she
has managed to combine her role as a Methodist
Minister's wife; caregiver; mother of six children
and grandmother of five with an amazing and
fulfilling career in the service of the Community.
For her outstanding contribution in the field of women
and development, it is fitting that the Caribbean
Community now invites Professor Barbara Evelyn
Bailey to accept the Ninth Triennial Award for
Women.
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