The Caribbean Nation promotes the One Caribbean policy and is founded on the belief that the Caribbean and all its islands and nations parts can and will only achieve full potential and greater development when all Caribbean resources are combined (the sum of the parts) for all and to the benefit of the whole region. We believe in the complete political, economic and social integration of the Caribbean.
Sunday, 18 November 2012
Address by PM Hon Kenny D. Anthony to The Barbados Chamber of Commerce and Industry on Regional Integration
"Make no mistake about it. Our region is in the throes of the greatest crisis since independence. The spectre of evolving into failed societies is no longer a subject of imagination. How our societies crawl out of this vicious vortex of persistent low growth, crippling debt, huge fiscal deficits and high unemployment is the single most important question facing us at this time. Indeed, if CARICOM wishes to be relevant to the lives of the people of the region, then that issue should dominate its deliberations at the next summit. CARICOM cannot be seen to be impotent when societies and economies are at risk, on the brink of collapse." - Dr. Kenny Anthony, Prime Minister of St Lucia, on Caribbean regional integration, November 2012.http://www.stlucia.gov.lc/resource/address-pm-hon-kenny-d-anthony-barbados-chamber-commerce-and-industry-regional-integration
Friday, 16 November 2012
Saint Lucia PM: Caribbean in greatest crisis since independence
"Make no mistake about it. Our region is in the throes of the greatest crisis since independence. The spectre of evolving into failed societies is no longer a subject of imagination. How our societies crawl out of this vicious vortex of persistent low growth, crippling debt, huge fiscal deficits and high unemployment is the single most important question facing us at this time." - Dr Kenny Anthony, Prime Minister of Saint Lucia, 2012.
Read more: http://www.caribbean360.com/index.php/opinion/635226.html#ixzz2CQ3NpM3Y
Read more: http://www.caribbean360.com/index.php/opinion/635226.html#ixzz2CQ3NpM3Y
Tuesday, 17 April 2012
Lecture on 'Caricom Single Market Economy (CSME) in global perspective'
Lecture/presentation on my dissertation findings – the thesis, "Caricom Single Market Economy (CSME) in global perspective: How can the furtherance of Caribbean regional integration through the CSME foster greater growth and development in a globalising world?"
Thursday 26 April, 2012, start time 1900hrs. Join me if you can at the University of the West Indies Open Campus Dominica, Elmshall Road, Roseau, Dominica.
Abstract
The Caribbean regional integration movement, among the ex-British colonies, post-World War II, has been persistent. Taking the form of a process which has resulted in institutions such as the West Indian Federation, CARIFTA, CARICOM and now the CSME, it has not, however, been successful at achieving full political and economic union. This thesis aims to discover what difference the current phase of the Caribbean regional integration process, CSME, can make. How can the CSME achieve its objectives in a rapidly changing and globalising world? Using a combination of desktop research, academic research literature, and contemporary views, this thesis explores the development of Caribbean regional integration alongside changes in the globalisation process and examines the dynamics of the linkages between the global, regional and national on the CSME in achieving its objectives. This thesis asks the question, can the CSME deliver and if so how. It then seeks to answer this question by analysing what went into the shaping of the CSME i.e. policies and objectives, and what has come out of the CSME, its establishment i.e. implementation and deliverables.
In conclusion, I argue that the evidence suggests that the potential for the CSME to achieve its objectives is immense but only through full implementation, ushering in a new regionalism based on new relations, linkages, opportunities and scale. I recommend regional institutional capacity building, an authoritative governance body and the stepping up of a leader country to coalesce the CSME for transformational change. However, as of July 2011, CSME is postponed.
Thursday 26 April, 2012, start time 1900hrs. Join me if you can at the University of the West Indies Open Campus Dominica, Elmshall Road, Roseau, Dominica.
Abstract
The Caribbean regional integration movement, among the ex-British colonies, post-World War II, has been persistent. Taking the form of a process which has resulted in institutions such as the West Indian Federation, CARIFTA, CARICOM and now the CSME, it has not, however, been successful at achieving full political and economic union. This thesis aims to discover what difference the current phase of the Caribbean regional integration process, CSME, can make. How can the CSME achieve its objectives in a rapidly changing and globalising world? Using a combination of desktop research, academic research literature, and contemporary views, this thesis explores the development of Caribbean regional integration alongside changes in the globalisation process and examines the dynamics of the linkages between the global, regional and national on the CSME in achieving its objectives. This thesis asks the question, can the CSME deliver and if so how. It then seeks to answer this question by analysing what went into the shaping of the CSME i.e. policies and objectives, and what has come out of the CSME, its establishment i.e. implementation and deliverables.
In conclusion, I argue that the evidence suggests that the potential for the CSME to achieve its objectives is immense but only through full implementation, ushering in a new regionalism based on new relations, linkages, opportunities and scale. I recommend regional institutional capacity building, an authoritative governance body and the stepping up of a leader country to coalesce the CSME for transformational change. However, as of July 2011, CSME is postponed.
Friday, 27 January 2012
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