Salutations
The Mandate
The CARICOM Commission on Youth Development arose
out of a mandate from the 27th Meeting of the
Conference of Heads of Government held in St. Kitts
and Nevis in July 2006. The Mandate is to “provide a
full scale analysis of the challenges and
opportunities for youth in the CARICOM Single Market
and Economy (CSME) and to make recommendations on
how to improve their well-being and empowerment.”
The Commission is blessed with a remarkable
balance of visionaries and dreamers, talent and
expertise, foresight and hindsight, youth and
experience residing in nine talented and creative
youth and six experienced and enabling experts drawn
from varied Member States.
The Meeting
Since March 2007, when the Commission was set up,
its journey which has been a challenging yet
rewarding one has taken it to the Republic of Haiti
for the Commission’s Third meeting. This is a
defining meeting in which we spent two days
discussing preliminary yet comprehensive research
findings conducted over the eighteen month life of
the Commission.
During the Commission’s two-day deliberations,
presenters highlighted regional issues and trends
distilled from a review of the literature on
Caribbean adolescents and youth and from preliminary
reports on youth perspectives on adolescent and
youth vision, aspirations, concerns, identity and
CSME perspectives; CARICOM and the CSME; risk,
vulnerability, resilience and protection; and the
relevance, functionality and responsiveness of youth
governance structures.
The Data and Review of Literature
The data analysed so far have revealed some very
interesting and in some instances rather disturbing
trends among our Caribbean youth.
- There is evidence of the knowledge and
information gaps existing among youth – Haitian
youth included – with regard to the Caribbean
Community and particularly its flagship
programme, the CARICOM Single Market and Economy
(CSME) and the Commission has discussed ways in
which this knowledge gap can be closed
- The data also revealed the need for the
Community both at the national and regional
level to empower and engage our Caribbean youth
at the highest decision-making level – and to
ensure that their voice is heard and listened to
- Identity issues was a common theme in the
data presented as well as in the literature
reviewed. The strong call for youth to feel a
part of the Caribbean and to feel a sense of
one-ness in the Caribbean was noted. The
Commission is alarmed at findings which indicate
that Caribbean youth feel a sense of
displacement and alienation and strong
recommendations will be made on how this issue
is to be addressed
- The issues of deferred, thwarted hopes and
dreams and a prevailing sense of hopelessness
were also expressed. In addition, the data point
to distorted and perverted value systems among
Caribbean youth.
- Of critical importance was the posture of
suspicion existing in the relationship between
youth of Lesser Developed Caribbean Countries (LDCs)
and More Developed Countries (MDCs). The kind of
suspicion which in itself defeats and undermines
the ideals of the CARICOM Single Market and
Economy.
The way forward
Having reviewed the Literature and examined the
data thoroughly, the CARICOM Commission will devise
a plan of action for the way forward.
The Commission will make recommendations that
would both enhance the capabilities of youth
leadership and at the same time identify ways in
which to youth risk factors and vulnerabilities
could be reduced especially among the poor and
underprivileged, the incapacitated and the otherwise
vulnerable.
It is hoped that the recommendations will
contribute to strengthening of the social
statistical basis on which decisions rest. Only in
this way can we make meaningful policy
recommendations on the actual social and economic
implications of youth policies and programmes,
thereby linking scientific evidence, policy research
and policy making.
The Commission’s final report will contain a
comprehensive situation analysis and recommendations
that will be submitted to the special Meeting of the
Council for Human and Social Development (COHSOD) in
May 2009, before it is presented to the CARICOM
Conference of Heads of Government in July 2009.
It is opportune that the Commission meets here in
Haiti. Members of the Commission have been enjoying
the warm hospitality of the Haitian people and have
so far tasted slices of its culture and traditions.
The rich interaction between the Commission and
Haitian youth from several organizations and network
is also invaluable.
We have had the opportunity first hand to observe
your resilience as a people. We have noted that for
much of your history, Haiti has faced much more than
others, perhaps because you had the audacity to
dream of an independent democratic nation well in
advance of other Caribbean colonies and you dared to
actualize that dream. It tells us that the yearning
for true democracy runs deep among the people –
hence the persistent struggle.
If the future of the Caribbean Community is left
in the hands of resilient Haitian youth then it is
in good hands. It is you along with the rest of the
Caribbean youth who will continue to dare to dream
about a new Caribbean - not one fraught with
suspicion, fear, discrimination, thwarted hopes and
dreams but a fully integrated one Caribbean in which
“you all can go over deah, and they all can come
over heah.”
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org