Employment generation and incentives for completing education emerged today as critical issues to fight crime and violence among youth in the Caribbean. In an unprecedented effort to support countries in the region and discuss new initiatives to help youth-at-risk, the World Bank and the Commonwealth Secretariat launched on May 6 a 2-day Regional Caribbean Conference on Keeping Boys Out of Risk.
Jamaican Prime Minister Bruce Golding, World Bank Vice President for Latin America and the Caribbean Pamela Cox, and Deputy Secretary General of the Commonwealth Secretariat Ransford Smith opened the inaugural session and highlighted the need for quality education, training and more job opportunities for the Caribbean youth.
The conference deals with the emerging cross-cutting problem of boys at risk and regional development challenges such as crime and violence, so-called male marginalization, access to the labor market and poverty alleviation.
“Curbing violence and ensuring education and job opportunities for the youth are priorities in Jamaica and in the whole Caribbean. This conference is a timely effort and we are here to support it” said Prime Minister Golding in his opening remarks.
During two days, Caribbean government authorities, policy makers, academia, civil society representatives, technical experts and field practitioners from the donor and development communities will discuss and exchange innovative ideas to keep boys out of risk.
“This Conference provides an excellent platform to work together in moving forward an agenda that puts youth first” emphasized Pamela Cox, World Bank Vice President for Latin America and the Caribbean. “More analysis and a broader exchange of experiences are critical in identifying policies and instruments to address the risky behavior” stated Cox.
The Regional Caribbean Conference on Keeping Boys Out of Risk focuses on underachievement in education, skills development, response to labor market challenges, and provides the opportunity to recognize award winning best
practice programs identified through the regional Caribbean Contest: Keeping Boys Out of Risk, launched in December 2008.
Submissions from eleven Caribbean states (Barbados, Belize, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Grenada, Haiti, Jamaica, Saint Kitts & Nevis, Saint Lucia, Suriname and Trinidad & Tobago), ranged from school mentoring and engaging after school activities to initiatives teaching youth, in particular young males, specific skills to increase their opportunities to live a healthy and productive life. A compilation of the selected regional best practices will be published for distribution via the Internet and other media after the conference.
“The compilation of selected best practices will be a good inventory from which governments and organizations can take concrete programs to replicate and implement. We hope that this useful guide will contribute to address the issue of boys’ underachievement and prevent crime and violence in the Caribbean” concluded Smith.
Employment generation and incentives for completing education emerged today as critical issues to fight crime and violence among youth in the Caribbean. In an unprecedented effort to support countries in the region and discuss new initiatives to help youth-at-risk, the World Bank and the Commonwealth Secretariat launched on May 6 a 2-day Regional Caribbean Conference on Keeping Boys Out of Risk.
(more…)
Archivado en: Caribe, Gobierno nacional, Menores infractores o en riesgo, Organismos internacionales, Pandillaje | Etiquetado: Caribe | Deja un Comentario »