ISSN 2077
Transcription
ISSN 2077
ISSN 2077 - 7043 FOREWORD Each epoch of Caricom’s existence has been characterized by the memes that informed the decision-making of its leadership groupings. These groups have comprised the older and allegedly more experienced academics and administrators – mostly persons in the age group 35 years and older. Theory and practice, then current, were combined to generate approaches to the issues of the day. The presumption has been that theory mated with idealism, but constrained by pragmatism and political adroitness, would produce the ‘right’ way. Among the receivers of the decisions arrived at for execution, are persons in the age group 18 to 35 years. Many of them have recently completed studies at university level. Their critical faculties are supposed to have been honed by those studies; and their selfconfidence has risen in the matter of their ability to identify, assess, and propose, solutions to the society’s problems. Accordingly, particularly for those who choose to not migrate in pursuit of individual ‘betterment’, their concerns as citizens of Caricom drive them to consider whether the current stream of decisions indeed augurs well for the future of Caricom. Sometimes they concur enthusiastically with what has been decided; but at other times they demur. The satirical tendencies of the yet-to-be convinced young intelligentsia in evaluating both the ‘correctness’ of what is being proposed to be done, and the cost effectiveness of what has been and is being done, continually manifest themselves. These views, if expressed in a manner that does not qualify automatically as ‘ole-talk’, have the potential for sharpening the perspicacity of the establishment. Should such sharpening occur, the effect would be akin to raising the composite IQ of Caricom’s leadership. Achieving this effect is, for various reasons, not likely to be an easy task. Among those reasons is the reality that, in our educational system, kudos is often given to those who master the art of accurate regurgitation of conventional wisdom Thus the graduates accorded greatest acclaim will include those that have developed their capacity for regurgitation to a high degree. If we suddenly require serious, analytically justified, departures from conventional wisdom on major issues of concern to Caricom, then we are in pursuit of what might be considered rare behaviour among the new intelligentsia. This periodical attempts to capture some considered views of the concerned young. Such views should be useful for review by the older decision-making establishment in pursuit of the objective of what is referred to above as ‘raising the composite IQ of Caricom’s leadership’. The periodical offers vignettes, snapshots in prose and in verse – commentaries by some members of the group of ‘concerned young’. The commentaries have been chosen, albeit in a haphazard way, as snapshots of some views expressed by members of this group from which the Caricom leaders of the near future will arise. The hope is that systematic publication of such views will, over time, encourage the emergence of constructive dissonance, by providing an opportunity for those being led to vent their views with politely constrained abandon. Myrtle Chuck-A-Sang Project Director UWI-CARICOM Project 2 Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 Contents Is the Caribbean Region On The Verge of Shipwreck? Ruel Johnson A Culture of Violence Dzifa Job 4 4 6 7 Climate Change - An Incremental Attack on our Development Yolanda Collins Coin Toss – Has throwing money at Caribbean Cricket improved the Game? Candice York 9 11 Crime and Security - Is crime a deterrent to Regional integration? Jermaine D. Nairne Development is a Way of Thinking Tricia Barrow Hazlewood 7 12 The Caribbean in the New World Order Benito Wheatley 14 Surviving the StormThe Global Financial Crisis and its Implications for Regional Integration Jon Bannister Information and Communication Technologies A Driver for the Region’s Economic Survival Joseph Ince 17 A Case for Regulation The CARICOM Financial Environment in the wake of CLICO Christine Clark The Honourable Usain Bolt, OJ Youngest Recipient of the Order of Jamaica 15 9 18 20 Expanding Merida Why the US needs to bring the Caribbean in to its latest anti-narcotic initiatives Karelle Samuda A Poem For Granny And A Flower Amilcar Sanatan Vladimir Lucien Romona Carrico 25 Poisoned Arts William Kippins 14 24 A Drowning Transitions 22 21 26 15 Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 3 Is the Caribbean Region on the verge of Shipwreck? Ruel Johnson “We have carried the integration process quite far, but we have halted, we are stumbling…” A LESS PERFECT UNION The circumstantial evidence over the past half year has not been encouraging – the BBC sums it up in the paragraph in a preconference article which states “St Vincent and Guyana are fretting over Barbados' immigration policy, Guyana and St Lucia complain about air fare prices of Caribbean Airlines and Liat, Jamaica hit outs [sic] at import barriers in Trinidad and Belize - the list of irritants appears to grow by the day.” Also in the background was the potentially factious issue of Trinidad and Tobago entering an alliance with the Organisation of East Caribbean States (OECS). Indeed, the air going into the recently concluded 30th Conference of the Heads of Government of CARICOM was more redolent of that before a heavyweight prize fight, or more appropriately a WWE Smackdown Free For All, than the annual meeting of the political leadership of a regional integration movement, the biggest bone of contention being that of immigration. THE ELEVEN-LETTER FOUR-LETTER WORD Yet the immigration issue, and perhaps every other issue, may be merely symptomatic of the region’s failure to launch in one area: political unity. There is a consensus that one of the fundamental issues which underwrote the failure, indeed the outright collapse, of the Federation of the West Indies 4 was the question of political union, and the associated issue of the sacrifice of ‘national’ sovereignty (a problematic concept considering the still colonised status of the founding members). To this day, in the post-colonial era, “political union” and [ceding] “sovereignty” are terms that are still anathema within the official dialectic of regional integration. Take for example the following questions taken from the FAQ page of the CARICOM Secretariat website: “Is the Caricom Single Market and Economy as [sic] political union? The CARICOM Single Market and Economy is not a political union. Does the Caricom Single Market and Economy replace national identity and sovereignty? The CARICOM Single Market and Economy is not a replacement for national identity and sovereignty.” Such terseness is arguably the epitome of the prevailing attitude of the regional political leadership when it comes to even a hint (or spectre, perhaps, if you happen to be regional leader) of the ceding of political power within a regional suprastructure. The politically acceptable verbiage includes terms such as the “pooling of sovereignty” as used by the regional’s leading public servant, SecretaryGeneral of CARICOM Edwin Carrington at the opening of COFAP 10, (May 2005)… “The pursuit of the Single Economy would require a certain measure Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 of pooling of their sovereignty by CARICOM member states. And, the harmonisation of macroeconomic and sectoral policies would involve the sacrificing of some measure of traditional national policy.” (Guyana Chronicle, 22-May-05) …or “shared sovereignty” , the SG again, this time at the opening session of the Clear Connect symposium on the CSME held in Barbados in June, 2006. Exhortation of political union has traditionally been from the periphery of regional officialdom – Havelock Brewster and Clive Thomas, for example. But political union and the unavoidable ceding of sovereignty (including the verbal labelling of it as such) to some degree may be an idea whose time has eventually and perhaps inevitably come, if the integration movement is to be saved from an implosion. Jamaican PM Bruce Golding’s frank analysis during his comments to the media during the recent Heads conference apparently leans towards this idea: “Caricom cannot acquire political authority without a political structure... If you want Caricom to be an authority that can override the parliament and the cabinets of its individual member states, then you must create a political union and identify those countries that are prepared to go in that direction. If you are not going in that direction then the challenge is to find a mechanism that works,” True, PM Golding’s tone on this issue appears to be softer, volte-face even, in contrast to his cautious approach as opposition leader, in 2005, towards the establishment of the CCJ (he expressed reservation about any institution whose establishment engendered a “degree of cessation of sovereignty”), and his assertion earlier this year that the successful implementation of the CSME was linked with the establishment of a political union, something in which Jamaica had “no interest”. True, also, that his Jamaican Labour Party has a history of reticence towards integration leading back to the Bustamante-initiated referendum which resulted in the eventual disintegration of the West Indian Federation. Yet, some credit must be given for his more than tacit acknowledgement that discussions of political union and some degree of the surrender of national sovereignty within a regional political structure need to be moved into the mainstream regional agenda. And with that comes yet another anathematic subject within regional discourse. REFERENDUM? Speaking to the media during the recently concluded Conference, Sir Shridath Ramphal, whose quote prefaces this article, said that during his tenure as a member of the West Indian Commission, what he found was that the feeling on the ground vis-à-vis issues of immigration, regionalism et cetera was often far less parochial and politically restrictive than the political leadership, as supposed barometers of public opinion and sentiment, made it appear to be. Whether this applies across the board is eminently debatable, as would be indicated by the election of PM David Thompson’s Democratic Labour Party to the government of Barbados, largely on what may be euphemistically referred to as an immigration reform platform, the policy implementation of which has seen the mass deportation of undocumented Caribbean nationals, mainly Guyanese, from Barbados. Indeed, what Sir Shridath sees as a disconnect between the people and their political leadership may go either way: if it is that those regional leaders who are parochial in their outlook can be accused of not adequately reflecting the will of the people, then it stands to reason that the same can be said of those leaders who are gungho about moving the integration process forward. What appears lacking within the present milieu is a credible mechanism via which the vox populi can be expressed and assessed as the basis for decisionmaking. If the supposed will of Demos is presented as a perpetual tacit excuse for not moving forward with a deeper integration – what would amount in spirit to (and here we channel the US Constitution) “a more perfect union” – then perhaps that will needs to be placed on record as the foundation for moving forward, in whatever direction. Undoubtedly, the word “referendum” is one that has very negative connotations within the history of regional integration, and today only seems to come up with regard to Latin American incumbents seeking to extend their tenure ad infinitum. Maybe the negativity is unwarranted – national elections are after all scheduled referendums on governance; a crossregional referendum on deepening the integration process is perhaps the best option, if this is what it takes to affirm or negate the direction in which the rhetoric says we should be heading, to break the gridlock and end the stasis. Ruel Johnson is a former feature/editorial writer with the Guyana Chronicle, and former sports/business/ features editor for the BVI Standpoint. He has had work published in Caribbean Beat, Trinidad Express, Jamaica Observer, Buenos Aires Herald and Small Axe Literary Journal; his article “Fear of Stones” (Guyana Chronicle, 2006) won the national awards for Best Feature and Best HIV/AIDS Story for the PAHO Caribbean Media Awards for Excellence in Health Journalism. Johnson is also a winner of the Guyana Prize for Literature for Best First Book of Fiction (2002; Ariadne & Other Stories), and the GT&T CARIFESTA X Publication Award (2008; Fictions,Volume One) - his collection of poetry,The Enormous Night, was also shortlisted for the 2002 Guyana Prize awards. He was script writer for the mini-series, Tides of Life, produced by Women Against Violence Everywhere (WAVE) with support from the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), and a scriptwriter for Link Show 2009. He is currently a freelance editorial consultant. CONCLUSION CARICOM is conceived as a sort of metaphorical ark in which the people of what constitutes the CARICOM region are going to find refuge against the inevitable tidal wave of globalisation. And there are numerous examples of how this ark works well, in health, education, culture and very often trade. The basic forceful logic of “Integrate or Perish” still holds true, yet somehow this vessel that was to guarantee our salvation finds itself buffeted not by some overwhelming external force, the global financial meltdown notwithstanding, but by a perfect storm of internal faction. The great integration ark is disintegrating, in danger of being shipwrecked from the inside out, and the one thing that increasing consensus seems to identify as the cementing agent – political union – is the one thing that, with increasing anachronism, has been deemed verboten by those at the helm. Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 5 A Culture Of Violence -Dzifa Job Dzifa Job, a national of Trinidad and Tobago, is the voice behind the blog Mystic Mélange (http://dzifajob.blogspot.com) that focuses on current events and social issues. Her articles have been featured in One Love Houston, and Caribbeanaxis.com. Dzifa resides in New York, and serves as an Assistant Account Executive at one of the leading Global Public Relations agencies Weber Shandwick. There she helps to coordinate and execute public relations programmes. These programmes include national and local media relations initiatives, and special events. As a young woman growing up in Trinidad, I was very dismissive of the men in my peer circle, and uninterested in acquiring the skills that “good women” were expected to master. I had no desire to learn how to iron a man’s shirt properly; and my cooking skills could at best be described as limited. When pressed by my mother to explain my lack of interest in “keeping house”, and my curt manner with the young men who pursued me, my response was simple: “Wife is an endangered species of which I will not be a part.” 6 Domestic violence is a fairly common occurrence in Trinidad. Since 2004, when for the first time Amnesty International’s Annual report singled out Trinidad & Tobago for its rising violence against women; it appears that not much has changed. The facade of a liberal society that purports to celebrate womanhood at every turn does not quite mask the reality that something took root during our nation’s evolution that has made acts of violence against women part of the fabric of our culture. We have accommodated this development. For example, in cases of domestic violence, there seems to be a disparity between the severity of the crime and the severity of the punishment. In June 2009, Horace Jackson was sentenced to 25 years hard labor, in addition to ten strokes with the birch for attempting to murder his ex common-law wife. His vicious attack caused her to lose her left hand, and thereby a means of earning an income for their two children. A high school classmate of mine admitted to me that she was forced to end her most recent relationship because the guy she was dating had the tendency to get “aggressive”. He shouted at her without any provocation, and, as he put it, shoved her to “get her attention”. While the assertion of female repression may conflict with the reality of thousands of scantily clad women parading through the streets of Port-of-Spain, dancing with wanton abandon to lyrics that cherish the innate sweetness of women and assert their sexuality, the repression is still there. It is in the old wives tales and “picong” that children grow up hearing: such as “them Indian cyahn take horn nah, that is why they have to drink Indian tonic and sometimes all them women need is a good lash.” My own father once told me, albeit in jest, after my failed attempt to iron his shirt, “women get hit for far less.” Probably the strongest indication of how deeply embedded violence against women has become in our social psyche, is the fact that it has found tacit expression in one of our more popular art forms: chutney music. Chutney music has been described by a UWI student as the “Rum till I die phenomenon” spawning songs that not only “promote strong alcohol Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 consumption”, but also “physical and verbal violence towards women”. These songs label the girlfriend/ wife as “a threat to East Indian male expression through the drinking of alcohol.” While soca artistes have yet to cross the line, as some chutney artistes have done with music videos that portray the lead singer in violent confrontational situations with their ‘significant others’, the lyrics of some of the most popular soca tunes and dancehall music should give us all cause for pause. For example, while KMC’s “I’m not drunk” parodies the behavior of a drunken man, one of the situations he describes is of an overly amorous and inebriated man ‘wining’ on every woman he sees. As a female masquerader, I’ve run into my fair share of aggressive men who while in an inebriated state were not afraid to use the Carnival festivities as an excuse to foist their overly amorous attentions on me. On one such occasion my refusal to give this suitor “ah dance”, led to a violent confrontation between him and my male friends who were thankfully within reach. In recent times, Jamaican religious leaders have called for a ban on “daggering” songs that contain lyrics that are suggestive and often support violence. Consider the recent hit song “Rampin’ Shop”, by Vybes Cartel, in which he declares “Me go bruck you back, when you come inna me rampin shop”. While art imitates life, music has the power to inform our psychology and philosophy like no other art form. I can accept that as a Caribbean woman I have been socialized to believe that men should more often than not play the role of sexual aggressor, but admittedly things get a little murky when one starts equating sex with extreme acts of violence, as terms such as “daggering” seem to do. The fact remains that despite independence and the appearances of an egalitarian society, women in the Caribbean do not generally hold the reins of power. For the most part we seem content to play second fiddle to the men in our lives, so long as they give us the freedom to wear short shorts and dance suggestively. We appear to not recognize that this is by no means a choice we have made freely because these “acts of liberation” benefit the men too. Even though the root causes of domestic violence do vary, one ought to be concerned about the future of any society that fails to ponder adequately the situations reflected by its art. Drunkenness can look funny, and over-protectiveness can seem romantic but both conditions can have highly undesirable results. The reality is that as more women shake off their traditional roles, Caribbean men will have to adapt to playing roles beyond those they are used to. If our music is used as a barometer, it appears that this need for male adaptation is an issue we have yet to address adequately. Climate Change “An Incremental attack on our Development” Yolanda Collins graduated in 2007 from the University of Guyana with a BSC (Honours) in International Relations. Her final year thesis dealt specifically with the impact of Climate Change on the Member States of the Caribbean Community and she has since had a keen interest in policy positions taken by the region with respect to this phenomenon. She has been employed at the CARICOM Secretariat since August, 2008. ‘CARICOM Secretary General calls Climate Change “an attack on our development”’, CARICOM Secretariat Press Release # 18/2009 dated January 27,2009 Yolanda Collins CARICOM Single Market and Economy. Our very existence, at most, and our way of life, at the very least, hinge on the manner in which we address the effects of the phenomenon of ‘Climate Change’. True integration among the member states of the Caribbean Community is likely to strengthen our capacity to react to the challenges being presented by Climate Change. The strengthening will occur through the three main elements of the Integration process: effective coordination of the Foreign Policies of Member States, entrenched Functional Cooperation, and full implementation of the CARICOM Single Market and Economy. The Secretary General of the Caribbean Community, Edwin Carrington, recently referred to Climate Change as “a current yearly incremental crisis - an attack on our development” . This statement warns aptly about the irreversible consequences to our development that are likely if we procrastinate. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), in addressing the probable effects of this phenomenon, stated that Climate Change “… is expected to result in more hostile regional climate change and sea level rises. Sea-level rise with associated coastal erosion and salt water intrusion, an escalation in the frequency and intensity of tropical storms and hurricanes and disruptions in precipitation and to fresh-water supply ‘CARICOM Secretary that threaten the very existence of General calls Climate CARICOM States.” Change “an attack on our development”’, CARICOM These and their concomitant ripple Secretariat Press Release # 18/2009 dated January effects include a wide range of social 27,2009 and economic consequences. Included are school, church, business and other institutional closures and relocations, especially coastal residential relocations; a substantial loss of livelihoods particularly for coastal farming and fisher folk, tourism and hospitality service providers; and the overall societal and financial costs of mitigation and adaptation efforts. Such costs will increase in step with our delay in addressing this challenge . We frequently speak of threats to our sovereignty, our existence and the need to deepen integration in the face of ‘insurmountable’ challenges. However, at a time when the future of CARICOM is being called into question, we, in the Caribbean Community, are currently facing one of the principal challenges of our time. The challenge to which I refer is that of ‘Climate Change’. Our reaction to this challenge is being overshadowed by concerns for our economies during a global economic crisis; the health of our citizens during a global pandemic; and emerging rifts among our member states in the run-up to the full implementation of the Extreme weather patterns and their debilitating effects have already begun to manifest themselves in our region, as exemplified by Hurricane Ivan which devastated Grenada in 2004, leaving 90% of homes destroyed and vast swaths of agriculture uprooted . To date, the process of rebuilding continues with the country’s Parliament still housed in temporary accommodations. Member states of the Caribbean Community are exceedingly dependent on their environment for their continued livelihood, through dependence on agriculture and tourism as main sources of income. We face jeopardy at all levels to our economic to social well-being, since adverse manifestations of climate change will lead to a multiplicity of wide ranging effects. The state of poverty, in which many Continued on page 8... Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 7 ...continued from page 7 CARICOM citizens already live, will be magnified throughout the course of the phenomenon. The geographical differences that exist among member states ought not to be viewed insularly, suggesting that some states are at a greater disadvantage than some others, and therefore negating the need for a unified and equitable response. Alicia Barcena, in her article “UNCED and Ocean and Coastal Management” stated that while the potential impacts that have been identified for coastal zones are applicable to small islands, these states face unique constraints in IPCC in “Climate Change and the comparison to that Caribbean: A draft Regional Strategy for Achieving Development resilient of other coastal to Climate Change – 2008-2015”, states with more Caribbean Community Climate Change extensive inland Centre, February 2009 areas. Although Interpretations from “Stern Review coastal states differ Report on the Economics of Climate in the options Change, Summary of Conclusions,” HM available to them Treasury, 2006, http://www.hm-treasury. gov.uk/d/Summary_of_Conclusions.pdf because they have the “Hurricane Ivan devastates possibility of moving Grenada”, Guardian.co.uk, September further inland, an 9, 2004, http://www.guardian. option simply not co.uk/environment/2004/sep/09/ afforded to our small naturaldisasters.climatechange, Last island counterparts, accessed July 14, 2009. there remain similar effects that will be manifested across the region. It is for this reason that a collaborative and cooperative approach to adaptation is necessary. Some member states, such as Suriname and Guyana, are in a better position to relocate their economic, social and political epicentres inland, as usable coastal land becomes inundated by sea level rise. Adaptation to this phenomenon is a responsibility that is being thrust upon us. However, it is envisioned that three salient elements of an integrated Caribbean Community will dramatically aid in our efforts toward adaptation. Firstly, the full utilization of labour and other factors of production that is envisioned in the implementation of the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME) will cushion the effects of climate change on our individual member states. The likelihood that resources may move freely within the community may not only provide greater options through which resources may be redeployed should an individual member state suffer from a sudden and devastating manifestation of the phenomenon, but also provide for a greater pool of resources and technical know-how in identifying mechanisms through which the impact of impending crises may be mitigated. An example is the widely reported relocation of families in Grenada to Barbados Alicia Barcena, “UNCED and Ocean and other islands and Coastal Management”, Ocean and around the region, Coastal Management, (Belfast: Elsevier in the aftermath of Science, 1992) p.42 Hurricane Ivan. This relocation allowed for continuity of the 8 family unit, education of children and maintenance of a certain standard of living during the process of rebuilding. Secondly, Functional Cooperation is also of unique importance in addressing Climate Change. The original Treaty of Chaguaramas establishing the Caribbean Community defines functional cooperation as the efficient operation of certain common services and activities for the benefit of the region’s people, the promotion of greater understanding among its people and the advancement of their social, cultural and technological development in activities such as air transportation, meteorological science and hurricane insurance, health, intra-regional technical assistance, intra-regional public service management, education and training . Such cooperation among member states will enhance our adaptation efforts by reducing the harsh effects that are likely to be faced in the aftermath of a manifestation of the crisis. Vital institutions around the region could adopt similar institutional methods of operation, thereby allowing for the seamless movement and relocation of resources. Consider, for example, the region-wide adoption of the Caribbean Examination Council as a standard examinations body. Should a member state of the Caribbean Community be hit by severe flooding, students from the affected member state would be able to relocate to another CARICOM state that is more capable of absorbing them without as gravely affecting the continuity of their education. Such cooperation would certainly strengthen our collective adaptation strategies since the negative effects of displacement of resources - human, capital and physical - will be buffered by similar standards region-wide. Collaborative and functionally cooperative efforts will also facilitate the application of resources across the region in not only predicting the negative effects, and in aiding the process of rebuilding. The Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre, for example, coordinates the Region’s collective response to climate change by providing timely forecasts and analyses of potentially hazardous impacts of climatic changes on the environment, and the development of special programmes which create opportunities for sustainable development.” Finally, a coordinated foreign policy is also likely to improve our capacity to address Climate Change. It is well known that CARICOM, along with many other developing nations, will be most drastically affected by Climate Change even though we contributed little to its emergence. We are therefore positioned to take the moral high ground in lobbying for compensation and support for the costs associated with our adaptation efforts. We will be presented with the perfect opportunity to pursue this goal at the upcoming International Climate Change negotiation set for December 2009 in Copenhagen. So far, preliminary feedback from Caribbean negotiators who have participated in the first round of negotiations on the United Nations Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCC) text of the Draft Declaration has been positive. It is felt that “a significant common understanding has been built to facilitate the negotiations”. Our foreign policy vis-à-vis climate change ought to be geared towards a more binding, measurable and enforceable international agreement to combat this occurrence. We should play our part in the resolution of this monumental issue by ensuring that we employ ‘green’ technologies in our Working Group on Functional development and Cooperation, “Final Report of during all stages the Task Force on Functional of our adaptation Cooperation”, Presented to the efforts. We need to Twenty-ninth Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government ensure that the very of the Caribbean Community, 1-4 July methods which aid 2008, Bolans, Antigua and Barbuda in cushioning the Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre, http://www. effects of Climate caricom.org/jsp/community/ccccc. Change do not jsp?menu=community, Last Accessed, in turn worsen July 14, 2009 the intensity of the phenomenon through increased deforestation and other such debilitating activities. In short, we must ensure that our development does not come at the cost of our further worsening the environment. Unfortunately, our work towards the implementation of the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME) has been stymied by divergent opinions on matters such as intra-regional migration, trade and foreign policy coordination, leading to the perception that CARICOM is failing in its mandate to integrate, and suggesting that a new and more vibrant integration movement is necessary. Reversals in policies on integration are counterproductive to our development, even more so in the face of this impending crisis. ‘Regional Negotiators positive on text for new Climate Change Agreement’, Individual member CARICOM Secretariat Press Release # states of CARICOM will face challenges 230/2009 dated June 15, 2009 arising from the requirements of the CSME. These challenges relate to matters such as, the increases in social costs arising from increases in immigrants. However, the progress of CARICOM, taken as a whole, does not admit the avoidance of common, integrated approaches. Any comprehensive analysis of the difficulties associated with Climate Change cannot but highlight the necessity of the coordination of the policies of the individual members of CARICOM, and the avoidance of division among the ranks. Candice York is a student at the University of the West Indies (Mona) where she is pursuing a Master of Philosophy programme in Geography. A Trinidad and Tobago National Scholarship winner, she has received numerous awards including the Faculty of Humanities and Education Award for Language and Argument in 2006, and the University of the West Indies Award for Outstanding Performance/Service in 2008 and 2009. Candice Coin Tossing York Has throwing money at Caribbean Cricket improved the game? Continued on page 10 Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 9 As the financial scandal surrounding the Standford name spread across our part of the globe, many horns began blowing a tune new to the concert halls of cricket. The traditional tune of ‘money is the root of all evil’ began to be played there. This situation has left us in the Caribbean region with a lot to think about. While an injection, by anyone, of much needed financial resources into the game of cricket is more than welcome, have not some players been blinded by the new green sun? Are they not choosing to play under the influence of money as opposed to the stimulus of the development of the game? In 2006 when the inaugural Stanford 20/20 game was played, the winning team walked away with a handsome sum of one million US dollars; and the man of the match pocketed one hundred thousand. Since then, the Indian Pro-League (IPL) increased the rewards – individual players in that tournament could earn as much as an entire team took home in the 20/20 tournament. But as the money came so did the critics. One might argue that the objections of cricket boards globally to the league dubbed ‘rogue’ are not unfounded. Leagues like the IPL provide an avenue whereby players can become millionaires, with arguably only the lottery providing another route by which that level of wealth could be achieved as fast. The objections of the cricket boards may therefore be seen as generated by the fear that their best players would be lost to a butchered form of the game that centers on the rapid acquisition of wealth rather than on the demonstration of talent. But is this entirely true, and even if it is only partially true, what are the implications for us in the Caribbean? Those of us blessed to have been around during the birth of one-day cricket would have been exposed to the opposition it faced when compared to the longer version of the game. Cricket is a game that is no stranger to evolution. No sport should be. Evolution is necessary as it helps keep the public interest alive. The Caribbean region faces a unique mix of difficulties where cricket is concerned. No other cricketing group is faced with the task of managing the game where participants represent the interests of as varied a culturally, socially and economically, disparate population as the West Indies. A major component of the difficulties is that many of the supporters of the game are located on islands from which, at times, none of the players originate. There is the need to appeal to as many countries in the region as possible, and what can do that better than offering the prospect of persons from your country winning millions of dollars a game? For each individual (whether at the level of player, or administrator, or pure 10 Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 spectator) there is a conceptual uncertainty about the role that financial reward to players should play in evincing effort and resolve to perform. It is left up to each individual to decide on the attitude that a professional cricketer should exhibit in the context that a pathway to wealth can be opened up if financial reward is correlated with performance. For several young people in the Caribbean, this pathway has already been explored in other sports such as track and field. Cricket may therefore be seen as another means whereby young people with the requisite talent can be given a chance to improve their earning capacity, and therefore their lives, through use of their sporting talent. However, the downhill path the West Indies cricket team has been travelling for more years than its supporters would like to count, needs to be considered. The West Indies team at times has caused those who can manage to speak between the tears to ask the proverbial ‘why’ about poor performance. The answers proffered have been many and varied; but in recent years there has been an increase in responses based on money issues. There is the suggestion that ‘win or lose’, players are unconcerned with both their personal and team performances because the cheques had been already written. So no real incentive other than pride could operate. It does appear that a system that correlates the earnings of individual players and teams with their performances is an indispensable condition for encouraging competitive effort. Also, for the benefit of not only the game but also the players, an environment has to be created whereby money is injected into the holding of tournaments, and substantial sums are also injected into programs that develop the techniques associated with all the forms of the game. A system with these two characteristics would place players in a situation where they are better able to prolong their time in the game, and increase their capacity to earn during that time. Players would be aware that talent is continually being identified and developed. This burgeoning pool of talent would assure the continual availability of good players and inhibit the growth of complacency among established players – the latter circumstance being one of the factors that has dragged down the West Indies team’s rankings over the years. A well-developed team, operating under a regime of ‘pay for performance’ would give the West Indies Cricket Board greater leverage when bargaining for sponsorship; and the system would be self-reinforcing in its pursuit of developing new talent. Crime and Security Is crime a deterrent to regional integration? Jermaine D. Nairne ‘UWISTAT Ambassador Jermaine D. Nairne is a 23-year old finalizing Master of Science (M.Sc) student in Government at the University of the West Indies, Mona. He completed his Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.) degree with honours in Political Science (major) and Criminology (minor). He is currently employed at the Institute of Criminal Justice and Security at the University and tutors for the Department of Government, UWI, Mona. In addition, he is a part-time lecturer at the University College of the Caribbean, Jamaica. Mr. Nairne is currently completing his M.Sc thesis on the Jamaican prison system to determine whether inmates are being socialized to improve their resistance to criminal behaviour. His research interest spans crime and security issues in Jamaica and the wider Caribbean. . The Caribbean region, like the rest of the world, is currently beset by economic woes. In addition, our problems are compounded by what many describe as a “startling reality” – crime. The impact of crime on the region’s security is occurring at a time when integration is a necessity, rather than simply a desire, since one can certainly not ignore the fact that the region has to form a united bloc to mitigate the effects of globalization. It is against this background that the following comments aim to address the issue of crime and security: Is crime a deterrent to regional integration? This paper explores the realities that face us as Caribbean people, focusing especially on how crime threatens our unified existence. It emphasizes the need for all of us to join in a frontal fight against this counterproductive force that exists in our societies, rather than jointly or severally trying to circumvent it. Our discussion of these matters would benefit significantly from clarification of the two overarching ideas - crime and regional integration. Crime may be viewed in two ways. Firstly, as Schmalleger (2004) notes, there is a legal perspective – the intentional violation of the criminal law for which a sanction is applied by the state. Secondly, it may be seen from a sociological perspective, and therefore can be understood as the violation of accepted social norms/conduct. Regional Integration as applied to the Caribbean speaks simply of the conjoining of the countries of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) under a single economic and market arrangement. From this arises the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME).The CSME promises to be replete with economic opportunities for individual member countries and, more importantly, for the region taken as a whole. Apprehension about committing fully to Integration has arisen partly because of the threat of a lack of security due to crime, and more specifically, violent crimes. Individual countries have expressed concern about the importation of criminality from particular “crime capitals”. While the current arrangement is such that specified groups can move freely throughout the region, when the CSME takes full effect, all CARICOM nationals will be allowed to so do. Accordingly, any CARICOM national who wishes to establish a business in any Member State will be treated as a national of that state. Having mentioned that ANY member of the community will be able to move freely, one may turn attention to the fact that this includes criminogenic elements; and this is where the main concerns lie. These concerns are both social as well as economic. Professor of Criminology at the University of the West Indies, Mona, Dr. Anthony Harriott (2002) in a report on Crime Trends in the Caribbean noted that there are several sources and causes of crime throughout the region. These include: poverty, economic inequality, drugs, corruption, and interactive processes, among others. It must be noted that no one Caribbean country is overburdened by ALL types of crime. For example, while violent crimes may be a problem in Jamaica, Grenada is faced with high levels of property crimes and Trinidad and Tobago has the unique problem of high rates of kidnapping. Using the same examples, Jamaica has expressed concern about Trinidadians transplanting kidnapping into the Jamaican society and likewise for Trinidad and Grenada. Also, there is concern about murders and other violent crimes in their societies as well as about guns and the drug trade. These concerns span the entire region. Caribbean Community Secretariat (2008) CARICOM Single Market and Economy. CARICOM- CSME Unit: Guyana Harriott, A (2002) Crime Trends in the Caribbean and Responses. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. The question that one is tempted to ask is: Schmalleger, F (2004) would circumventing regional integration, Criminal Justice: A Brief Introduction. Prentice Hall. in particular, constraining the movement of New Jersey citizens, eliminate the problem of crime? The Siegel, L (2003) Criminology. 8th Edition. Thomson answer is ‘Absolutely not!’ Although individual Wadsworth: Canada. territories may be prone to specific types The Caribbean Single Market of crimes, efforts to mitigate the problems and Economy http://www.caricom. of crime have to be concerted. Crime will org/jsp/single_market/ continue to exist whether we are an integrated single_market_index. jsp?menu=csme. Retrieved unit or we persist as single entities; in fact, the Monday May 11, 2009. fight will be harder if we are to remain single entities. However, if we amalgamate our efforts, we will save both time and money, as no one country has the financial or human resources to combat the problem effectively at its current scale.What we must do is to face the challenge as a unit and engage our minds creatively so as to minimize the impact of the culture of violence that may exist.While it is true that we cannot eliminate criminality, we definitely can reduce it significantly. We must engage the Caribbean population in the Region at every level – engage citizens, the state, educational institutions as well as other stakeholders – and improve our systems. The Institute of Criminal Justice and Security based at the University of the West Indies with Centres at each campus can aid in this process as their mandate includes research and development of policies as they relate to crime. The University of the West Indies, as a regional institution, can lead in this respect as various methodologies can be employed to analyze the trends, the current reality and the solutions to address the problem. In addition to this, the University can engage other educational institutions throughout the region to facilitate solution-based collaboration. Interestingly, rather than being a deterrent to regional integration crime would then function as a unifying issue as the different governments sought to collaborate and engage the entire region. It should be noted that ‘crime and security’ as a deterrent to regional integration ought not to be viewed in its usual pejorative sense, but instead, should be seen as an opportunity to strengthen what may be described as a weak link in our Caribbean chain. It cannot be disputed that there are genuine concerns about crime in the region; however, we all must work to facilitate the transition to peace and security. The sooner we address the issue of crime the sooner the region will be able to focus on developmental issues that are necessary to advance the Caribbean as a whole. In recognition of the way that crime divides us, let us resolve to make it unite us, for it is only through a collective effort that there will be sustainable peace, safety and security in the Caribbean region. Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 11 Development is a Way of Thinking! by:Tricia Barrow Hazlewood Tricia Barrow Hazelwood is a Senior Project Officer in the Foreign and Community Relations Directorate of the CARICOM Secretariat where she has worked since 2003. She has completed a Masters Degree in Foreign Languages applied to Business and Trade from the University of Caen, France. She also has two additional Masters degrees from the Sorbonne University in Paris, France. One is in International Trade and the other is in Property Land and Ownership with a minor in Commonwealth Studies. Tricia belongs to a family of engineers, artists and teachers and has high regard for the power of the arts and science (including Information and Communication Technology), as tools for human and social development, regional integration, and the consolidation and enhancement of relations between cultures and countries. I am a black Trinidadian national with a ‘red’ father carrying French blood and a ‘dark’ mother with Spanish hair. I studied in Trinidad and Tobago and then France only to return to my Region to marry a Guyanese and work and live in the field of regional integration and development. I am in short your typical sort of Caribbean person. Development, progress, whatever you call it, has always been my passion. My father always told me that the measure of a man’s success is how much better the next generation does. My mother always told me that education is the key to success.With the zealous independence of one coming of age, and the natural curiosity of an islander desirous of seeing what lies beyond an island haven, I set out at 19 to test these hypotheses and their nexus… to see for myself the successes of a civilization built on many generations of fathers and mothers telling their daughters just what mine had told me. My choice of France was a choice of idealism. For me any country that treated education as a right and duty granted it to the meritorious and disciplined was one worth investigating. Any country that granted foreigners like myself equal access to that right was a successful and prescient one - one which, in an age of globalization, had seen it fit to ‘globalise’ education. Europe, was an education for me: clichés aside about development being measured by GDP and sophisticated infrastructure, it struck me there that development is really a state of mind, an individual appreciation for beauty and order, justice and love which when shared and expressed by a collective constitutes 12 development. In France, for example, the cities are categorized according to ‘fleuries’ or flower points, with cities gaining or losing ‘flowers’ according to how many plants (preferably flowering!) that fill their street pots and parks. Tourists - even local ones - flock to those cities whose street lamps glow amidst fuchsia petunias Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 and golden marigolds, and city councils and home owners alike huddle during winter around garden plans that will bloom in spring. The impact of this practice is as transcendent and multitiered as the practice itself is simple. The Councils generate employment; the promise of employment inspires the accreditation of ‘paysagistes’ or landscape artists; the friendly annual intra city competition for fleuries engenders a sense of pride in each street, neighbourhood and community; the tourists flocking to see the annual innovations of the landscape artists generate revenue; the town dwellers anticipate the beauty of the flowers and the business of the visitors. The flowers bring family and community togetherness, beauty and revenue, and most of all, they bring joy. That, to my mind, is development. In Spain trainloads of retirees fill what would have been vacant luxury hotel rooms around the country during off peak season- an initiative perhaps of some obscure hotelier or mayor that grew in popularity and became a norm in this nation that is a world renowned tourist destination. The retirees socialize amongst themselves to the relief of caregivers who stress continued activity and interaction as critical to good health, and, to the delight of benevolent hoteliers, they generate revenues even in ‘down’ months. Professionals providing specialized care for the elderly find themselves contracted to service the unlikely winter clienteles of these resorts and so the advantages multiply in the interest of all- social cohesion, public health, revenues, promotion of local brands (hotel and otherwise) – development – roars ahead. A programme whereby willing families departing on holiday ‘adopt’ a child who would not ordinarily enjoy one engenders similar far reaching socio-economic dividends as does one whereby young students mentor elderly persons desirous of learning how to surf the net or speak a foreign language. For my part, I participated in a programme as a young university student whereby for six hours a week I taught English and communication in exchange for a regional council remuneration that covered my accommodation costs every year. For my honeymoon, my husband and I visited Europe- Rome, Venice, Paris and Caen. It was his first trip. The varied subjects of his wonder were refreshingly, sweetly and comically reminiscent of my own upon arrival in France for the first time a decade earlier. I had been fascinated then at how the bus would, in snow or sun, arrive at 6:57 pm exactly just as the schedule at the stop had predicted - not one minute earlier nor one later. He was entranced by the sheer number of people on any given street at any given time. I banned him from taking random pictures of random crowds on random streets which he did frequently, always with the observation: “This is to show everyone what critical mass looks like.” The highways impressed him, of course, but more so the prideful way in which the street cleaners did their jobs; that the women doing this work wore makeup, and that they answered the endless barrage of similar questions by lost tourists with smiles of equanimity, even taking the time to remove their gloves and walk with us down the street to point out a route. He noted with appreciation that the streets were so regularly cleaned - and not just when a foreign premier was visiting or an international event was being hosted. And that the Italian store keepers spoke with him in English and spoke with me in French. On the way back home, anxious to rediscover his country and his home, he nevertheless wondered when this philosophy of development would reach our shores. These snapshots of family, community and national synergies, these simple but thoughtful socio-economic initiatives are the substance of development. Quite apart from the tangible dividends derived are the greater and more profound values that they engender and that constitute the very fabric of a developed society- respect for the elderly, investment in youth, concern and appreciation for one’s surroundings and a sense of responsibility toward its maintenance. We saw ugliness and inefficiency of course- no place is immune - but what we also saw were the creative efforts to correct them. Development is more than highways and foreign reserves. The well known Caribbean ‘susu’ or ‘box hand’ is development. Disciplined, courteous and humble children are development. Development does not necessarily require that a country or people be rich, only that they respect themselves, each other and their environment. From thence will spring the persons who will create the policies and pursue the results that bespeak a developed civilization. Our leaders sometimes seem to forget that as they pursue that golden objective of ‘people-centred development’ they really must place people at the very heart. And this requires less revenue than it does imagination. A developed society can be engineered out of the marriage of sheer good ideas and good intentions. People will rally around people, and when they do, development becomes reality. Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 13 The Caribbean IN THE NEW WORLD ORDER is diminishing and an uncertain new world order is emerging. Benito Wheatl ey Benito Wheatley serves as a Program Board Associate at the Institute of Caribbean Studies (ICS) in Washington, DC. There he focuses on Caribbean Affairs and International Development. In 1999, he completed his undergraduate education at Morehouse College, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science and in 2005 he obtained a Master of Arts degree in Political Science from Georgia State University, with a concentration in International Relations. He has served as Youth Representative at the UNESCO National Commission of the British Virgin Islands and has represented the British Virgin Islands at UNESCO’s biennial General Conference and Youth Forum in Paris, France. His research interests are Caribbean Development and Regional Integration. He is also an active contributor to Overseas Territories Review and the BVI Beacon. Caribbean states today find themselves in an international system in which the traditional centers of power are shifting. No longer is power solely concentrated among a select few powerful states in North America, Europe and Japan; rather, economic, political, and military power are now more widely dispersed around the world. The economic and financial weakening of the West, coupled with the rise of China, India, Brazil and a resurgent Russia, have dramatically changed the power dynamics of the international system and accelerated the pace of change. In sum, the uni-polar world of the post-Cold War era dominated by the United States and its allies This rare realignment of the international system presents a historic opportunity for Caribbean states to reinvent themselves in world affairs and to assert themselves on the international stage. Importantly, the Caribbean’s geographic location and colonial history place it within multiple spheres of influence and define the region’s relationship with the rest of the world. The international relations of the region encompasses Caribbean state’s relations with powerful state actors like the United States (US), China, and Russia; former colonial and status quo powers such as Britain, France, the Netherlands and Canada; regional powers like Cuba; and emerging states like Venezuela. CARICOM, the Caribbean’s premier regional organization, is an exercise by a collection of Caribbean states to carve out an independent sphere of influence. The organization’s major challenge is managing the region’s international relationships, while maintaining an independent position that promotes the interests of the region. Notably, the Caribbean has been courted by a number of states as the competition for natural resources and influence between traditional and emerging powers has intensified in recent years. Great powers such as China and Russia have established partnerships and struck a number of strategic deals with and in select Caribbean countries. Venezuela has made strategic overtures toward certain CARICOM states in what appears to be a deliberate attempt to peel away various member states from their traditional regional grouping and draw them into the orbit of the revolutionary state. The US is closely monitoring the activities of other world powers in the region and recently pledged to renew engagement with CARICOM and to increase aid flows to the region. Despite these advances, CARICOM must be careful not to entangle itself in any regional, hemispheric, or global disputes or rivalries between competing powers. Rather, Caribbean states should concentrate their foreign policy on international trade, climate change, democracy, and other issues that directly impact the region. Historically, the Caribbean, with the exception of Cuba, has played a marginal role in world affairs in the post-Cold War era. The relatively weak position of the region in the international system necessitates its small island and coastal developing states’ reliance on international organizations and institutions such as the United Nations (UN), World Trade Organization (WTO), and Organization of American States (OAS) to advance their interests in global affairs. As members of the WTO, Caribbean states have skillfully defended their commercial interests, which was clearly demonstrated by the Republic of Antigua & Barbuda, which successfully mounted a challenge against the United States in 2005 on the issue of online gambling. Caribbean states have also vigorously defended their commercial interests in the stalled Doha round of international trade talks by joining a number of emerging and developing states calling for the elimination of farm subsidies and lowering of non-tariff barriers in agricultural markets in the US, Europe, and Japan. continues on page 15... 14 Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 The Caribbean in the New World Order ...continues from page 14 In the diplomatic arena, Caribbean states have also performed skillfully, which was most recently demonstrated by the twin-island Republic of Trinidad and Tobago, which successfully hosted and superbly chaired the Summit of the Americas. The keenly anticipated meeting was expected to be highly contentious and non-productive, but was salvaged in part by the statesmanship of Prime Minister Patrick Manning and his staff. Importantly, CARICOM member states are strategically positioned to play a constructive role in the democratic development of the region, given their strong traditions of democracy and respect for human rights. Their stellar record in both areas gives them the credibility and legitimacy to speak forcefully on issues of democratization, political reform, and human rights; particularly as it concerns Cuba and Haiti. Another area where the Caribbean as a region has an opportunity to make its voice heard internationally is climate change. The danger of rising sea levels and more intense and frequent tropical storms and hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea as a result of global warming makes climate change a legitimate concern for island and coastal nations. Caribbean states should use the UN General Assembly and OAS as platforms to express their concerns and inform the world about the real dangers of climate change and its impact on the region. Caribbean states must also leverage international institutions to garner support for combating problems like drug and human trafficking. Finally, in order to play a greater role in global affairs, Caribbean states must transform the region’s image from that of sunny vacation destinations and offshore financial centers to regional power brokers. The Dominican Republic was moderately successful in this regard when it helped mediate and resolve a conflict between Venezuela, Colombia, and Ecuador in 2008. In conclusion, the realignment of the international system has created a historic opening for the Caribbean. Caribbean states, and in particular CARICOM member states, have an opportunity to change the Caribbean’s marginal role in world affairs by strategically asserting themselves on the international stage. A constructive role can be played by Caribbean states in hemispheric relations and the democratization of Cuba and stabilization of Haiti. Caribbean states can also take active roles in international trade negotiations facilitated by the WTO and global talks on climate change. If Caribbean states act strategically to position themselves as power brokers in the emerging new world order, they have an opportunity to exert a greater measure of influence in the international system than has traditionally been the case, despite their limited capabilities as small island and coastal developing states. Surviving the Storm The Global Financial Crisis and its implications Jon Ban nister John R. Bannister, a Barbadian by birth, is a primary school teacher. He is currently pursuing a doctoral degree in history / politics enrolled at the University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus. His degree programme is focusing on the use of conflict theories to analyse and compare the effectiveness of select integration processes – with special emphasis on the CARICOM experience. He possesses an MA in History. The focus of that course of study was on the evolution of US foreign policies in the latter half of the 20th century and on their effects on CARICOM’s political processes and integration efforts. During the latter 1990s Caricom was faced with myriad problems. Several of these problems were associated with the effects of policies that Washington developed to address main domestic concerns of the USA. These concerns included a burgeoning trade deficit with China/Asia and run-away national debt. The policies adopted threatened to undermine and cripple many Caricom countries. They impacted on issues such as those related to NAFTA, OECD black-listings, WTO regulations, the ensuing ‘banana wars’, and the revocation of preferential trade agreements that had long buoyed the region’s raw material industries, under the auspices of the Lomé Conventions. CARICOM’s difficulties were further compounded by the policies that sought to address the US’s flight of capital in the face of globalisation. Consequent pressures were experienced in the region’s established tourism sector and its nascent financial services industries. For the fatalists, these developments presaged the end of Caricom as many member states sought respite individually from the economic fallout and the expected socio-political problems. However, many of the region’s leaders and technocrats saw the sense in addressing those issues on the world stage as a single, coherent voice. The mantra: ‘a single coherent voice’, ultimately led to a revision of the Treaty of Chaguaramas as early as 2001; a revision that was later formalised in January 2006 as the Caribbean Single Market component of the Caribbean Single Market and Economy by less than half of the Caricom members. One gets a sense of deeper integration on paper and in rhetoric – but we did not ‘shake apart’. Now, here we are at the sunset of the millennium’s first decade, and we are seemingly faced with the same issues of integration - a Washington seeking to shore-up the US’s ailing economy, and the resulting policies again challenging our foreign capitaldependent industries. A major difference, however, is that unlike the 1990s, when the major financial crisis was localised in Asia, that crisis is now global. The environment in which the current spectrum of issues has arisen is far more volatile.The question that becomes apparent then is: If we recognise at each critical juncture that integration is our best hope for survival as independents, then why has this crisis not propelled us expeditiously in that direction? Highly publicised fissures in Caricom’s unity (especially in relation to recent issues such as the EPA with the EU, in 2008; and even in the signing of the Declaration of Port-of-Spain, in April 2009) do little to foster hope for the achievement of such apparently utopian, though pragmatic, goals. One realises, as do the region’s social/political commentators, economists, learned technocrats, and observant laymen, that there is not even a fully co-ordinated response to the ongoing global financial meltdown. It is common knowledge that the EU met and forged a plan of attack as early as mid-2008; and the US’s presidential candidates met with the incumbent Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 15 Surviving the Storm The Global Financial Crisis and its implications for Regional Integration continued from page 15 President G.W. Bush, later that same year, to formulate a ‘bail-out’ plan for certain industries.These economies, though stronger than those comprising CARICOM, have structured plans. In comparison, though economies in CARICOM have registered casualties among the financial giants – the Stanford Group and the CL Financial Group, there is relatively less responsiveness to the jeopardy. Sure, Trinidad and Tobago, followed by Barbados, have devised ‘bail-out’ schemes for their respective Clico groups; and yes, the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank has moved in response to the run on the Bank of Antigua owned and operated by the Stanford Group , and financial institutions in the Central Bank’s member states have since acquired its assets. There has even been the belated formation of a College of Regulators entrusted with the task of determining and locating the bulk of the CL Financial Group’s assets and liabilities. However, apart from the last mentioned initiative, a regionally coordinated response is lacking. If one uses the handling of this global financial crisis as an indicator of the willingness of the region to pursue integration, then one realises that the effort towards integration is in crisis. There seems to be acknowledgement by some of our leaders that they need to move beyond mere rhetoric. For instance, Prime Minister Brown of Belize, at one of the recently convened Caricom Heads of Government meetings, stated: “The global financial crisis has been hovering over us like an incubus. To posit that it should act as a spur rather than a deterrent to consolidation of our Caricom destiny is one thing. To actually manage our processes in such a way to make the word flesh, is quite another.” However, this candid understanding is thrust sharply into contrast with comments made by others in different forums which give further insights into the issue. One such comment was given, during a postconference interview after the Caricom heads had met in mid-March 2009, by Trinidad and Tobago’s Prime Minister, Patrick Manning. Prime Minister Manning is quoted as saying: “Even though we have been brought in kicking and screaming and out of necessity, the fact is that we are mature enough to understand the situation that is before us.” Manning’s language seems to imply a lack of the willing co-operation necessary for the evolution of further Caricom integration. It does, however, underscore the belief that it is not a question of ‘can the region integrate’ but a realisation that ‘it must’. Thus, one finds it ironic that the individuals entrusted with the charge of implementing regional integration are sometimes the ones least willing to so do. Caribbean leaders have often been chided for their 16 tardiness in the development of regional integration processes. However, on closer inspection, one realises that the blame is not entirely theirs to bear. It is not for want of talent or desire that our technocrats and leaders have been slow to act in the implementation of the region’s further integration, but theirs, especially the latter, is a precarious position – balancing what is best for their respective countries with what is really best for their respective countries. In 1958, the people of Jamaica defeated Federation with a referendum vote of 54% to 46% against its implementation. This single point is an often overlooked lesson in the democratization of issues in the Caribbean. It is argued that had the people of Jamaica been positively sensitized to the issues of Federation then its more adverse effects could not have been used as a political ‘means to an end’. Many Caribbean opposition leaders are guilty of this; however, we are all guilty of not necessarily democratizing the process effectively. We are all cognisant of the fact that leaders and political parties are supposed to an expression of the people’s will and to go against this, especially on issues in which the public ‘temperature’ is hot, is akin to political suicide – as apparent with N. Manley and the Federation debacle. This ‘Manley-Busatmante’ practice, though, prevails and has been perpetuated in regard to public sensitization of integrationary issues. There is a severe need to bring the pertinent issues to the people of the region in a meaningful way, and not the vague message that ‘it is a benefit to the region’. The region is made up of people, people who need to know ‘how does integration benefit me, the individual, the family unit?’ The Latina America and Caribbean Economic System (Spanish acronym, SELA) organisations notes that the Caricom and Latin American governments must “encourage civil society to take part in integration processes in response to the pressure exerted by groups made up of highly organised networks capable of influencing public opinion…” SELA further posited that businesses, unions, academic and religious groups need to provide the ongoing integration processes with a broad support base, thereby giving them legitimacy and transparency. In other words, due to a lack of the democratization of the integrationary process in the region there is little or no popular agitation, hence, it languishes as a political and rhetorical ‘plaything’. From the countless online chat-rooms and blogs on regional issues, one gets a sense that there is an understanding amongst the region’s people that there needs to be deeper integration. It is this ‘deeper’ integration, however, that is at the heart of Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 slowing the process. One will not naively state that this emphatically is the only issue at heart but it is a significant one, as put into particularly sharp focus by the Guyanese/Barbadian polemic. The parameters of this paper will not allow for full elucidation of all issues at stake in the inquiry. Nevertheless, one must also realise, as former Prime Minister of Barbados, Owen Arthur, put it when presenting at the Rotary World Understanding Day dinner, 27 February, 2009 that essentially our leaders are adept at handling economic crises as they have been doing so from the inception of these independent island states. This view alone offers some significant insight into the slow crawl of our integration process. However, it also serves to undermine the view that the socio-economic problems, brought into sharp focus by the global financial crisis, is an inhibitor to the regional integration process. Rather, it seems, if we consider the former Prime Minister’s statements, that on the contrary, it is our skilled ability in managing such crises that precludes a hastening of integration to stem negative fallout. In conclusion, one notes that the inquiry asks one to consider whether the crisis can stall, hinder, or better yet, catalyse further integration.The realisation, though, is that this process has to move from being extrinsically motivated. Its impetus must be from within the region or one fears its progress will remain politically and rhetorically encumbered. Joseph Ince is the Director and Founder of InceGroup, an institution that creates websites and helps businesses in St.Vincent to initialise their Internet, Software and Engineering needs. He graduated with an Associate Degree in Computer Studies from the Barbados Community College in 2002, and is currently pursuing an Executive Diploma in IT Management from the Barbados Cavehill School of Business. His company is the first Eastern Caribbean finalist, selected from 854 companies worldwide by the Organisation have answered if they are to implement systems with the least possible employee resistance or unwillingness to learn and accept the change. A Driver for the Region’s Economic Survival Throughout Caricom, individual economies have experienced growth in various sectors, and significant growth has been documented particularly in the areas of Information and Communication Technology. A good example of this phenomenon is the Telecommunications sector. That sector has built a solid reputation for providing efficient mobile services and has provided self-employment to vendors who sell prepaid phone cards. The population in Caricom appears to have become reliant on mobile technology, a development that has facilitated sustained positive economic growth. This essay will address the topic of how Information and Communication Technology facilitate economic survival and stimulate economic growth. It will look at the issue from the vantage points of organizations and of individuals to derive relevant perspectives. There are several factors that have to be considered when feasibility studies are undertaken to determine what needs to be done for organizations to acquire or improve their technological capabilities. One main factor deals with the employees’ ability to embrace the proposed change. This is probably the most important factor, as the existence and vibrancy of any organization depend profoundly on the quality of its human capital, and its understanding and commitment to organizational goals. Organizations that train their employees for specific roles would be faced with implementing and training their employees to use Information Technology to manage several processes within the organization. If employees do not see the change as beneficial, then they would be reluctant to learn and apply the new technology that is to be implemented. As a result, management may have assessed the systems as ineffective, when it was simply the mindset of the employees that defeated the attempted change in the first place. Understanding the culture of the Organization is also important for an Information Technology consultant or Manager. What is the environment of the Organization? Are the decisions made by the Board of Directors or other management? What systems are currently in place? - These are just a few questions specialists may be required to ask and Another factor is that the current Information Technology systems in the Organization may not be adequate for dealing with future systemic changes. This circumstance would hinder development in general. For example, if the government has issued predefined forms for price control on imported goods, and the forms are required to be filled by using a series of complex mathematical calculations in order to obtain an approved figure, the situation may be one in which only a few employees know how to complete these forms. The Specialist can design a system that can perform the calculations based on minimal input of data by the user and the system can print the approved figure on the predefined Government form. This would not only be efficient, but also in the event of employee sickness, absence or even death, the Organization can continue its operations once all its employees understand the system and the reasons why the system was designed. A third factor is the appropriateness of international products as opposed to regional or local products. We must be careful, in identifying any International product for use in a Caribbean business, to ensure that it supports the Organization’s goals or interests. For Information Technology to be used as an effective tool facilitating the Caribbean’s economic survival, it should be Caribbean based, and tailored to the Organization’s environment. Organizations have to ensure that their employees use information technology with which they are comfortable, as opposed to encouraging employees to pretend that they understand a system as a means of demonstrating their technical ability. Organizations that invest in systems which are simple enough for the user, but structurally complex enough to generate statistics useful at pertinent management levels, would be best positioned to access the benefits of Information Technology. Let us now focus on an Organization’s possible utilization of Information and Technology in pursuit of its economic survival and growth, from the perspective of the individual technician. Consider this question: how many graduates are awarded Computer related degrees in the Caribbean, and simply find themselves working for an Organization? The truth is that although working for an Organization is not bad in itself; the individual’s possible contributions would Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 17 be limited to only the Organization in which he or she works. Other Organizations that would like to use technology to enhance their business but may not have regular work for a Specialist, or may not be able to add an Information technology related position to their payroll, would be unable to benefit from that individual’s input. This situation suggests that some opportunities for individual effort should be highlighted: The first opportunity is self-employment. Many Caribbean nationals see forming their own business with an adequate complement of employees as something for which they would need extensive capital. This perception deters many from pursuing this entrepreneurial option especially since they also perceive that companies may need the services they offer only for a limited time. We should be committed to developing our communities by offering smaller companies the same services offered to larger Organizations to increase their capacity for growth. This marketing initiative would therefore serve to make the economy stronger. Also, there are mentoring opportunities available to train youths who wish to gain similar technical knowledge for the benefit of their communities. The Caribbean has already lost valuable human resources through migration to the developed world. We should therefore endeavour to use our limited remaining resources to train youths to perform these tasks without feeling inadequate. In this respect, the Government’s responsibility should be seen as not so much directly to create employment, but to facilitate the creation of employment ventures in the region. There are also large-scale projects in all aspects of Technology .that are being funded by International Organizations for the benefit of developing Caribbean nations. The Caricom Single Market & Economy is intended to be a regime that provides to all citizens of Caricom countries equal access to opportunities for economic progress. Under such conditions, Information Technology, appropriately applied at organizational and individual levels becomes a fundamental ingredient for facilitating economic survival and growth throughout Caricom. A CASE FOR REGULATION The CARICOM financial enviroment in the wake of Clico by Christine Clark Christine Clarke graduated magna cum laude from Mount Holyoke College with a Bachelor of Arts (honours) in Mathematics and Economics in 2002. She also possesses a PhD in Economics from Rice University, with a specialization in Public Finance. Dr. Clarke has been the recipient of numerous awards including the Phoebe Tulman Perlman Prize for Honors thesis in Economics; a Graduate Fellowship from the Organization of American States; the Virginia Galbraith Undergraduate Prize in Economics for Graduate Study; and the Ora N. Arnold Fellowship for Graduate Studies. She currently serves as the Director of Economic Planning and Research at the Planning Institute of Jamaica. 18 Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 The world economic scene is pockmarked with financial crises of varying longevity and profundity. Concern about the length and the depth of a crisis is warranted since, as crises persist, the risk of contagion and the size of the fallout increase exponentially. Fallout of sufficient severity will have harsh implications for household wealth, requiring some intervention from the state. The current crises evoke questions about the extent to which policy makers and financial institutions have learnt from past crises. Indeed, the crises cause us to refer to the dynamism of corporations, particularly those in the US economy where scores of listed firms have disappeared from exchanges. The “creative destruction” cycle that is embedded in the so-called free market system has tended to cause a discontinuity in the interpretation of indicators of crisis. We appear to have resiled from the idea that unless there is perceptive monitoring of financial markets, crises such as the Great Depression, which are significant life altering and market changing events, can recur. Globally, stock exchanges and financial markets in 2008 have differed vastly from their predecessors in the way they have operated. Markets have become almost totally interdependent. Movements in major markets will cause less developed ones to move. Financial institutions depend primarily on trust. Leaving deposits in an institution requires confidence that they will be paid over on demand.To the extent that regulators exist, investor confidence increases. If this trust is betrayed, as happens when regulated institutions collapse, not only is the credibility of the regulator reduced but also confidence in the institutions that remain becomes very low. Accordingly, the occurrence of a crisis threatens both the credibility and the integrity of the entire financial system. The socioeconomic impacts of crises like the Great Depression last for many years. These impacts change the structure of society, especially in terms of the composition of the ‘haves’ and the ‘have-nots’. The impact on private household wealth caused by bank closures makes certainty of repayment a critical public good. Very often, only the very young “losers” have any prospect of rebuilding wealth lost due to crises. The depth and breadth of the financial crisis of 2008 was facilitated by liberalized financial markets which leveraged technology to facilitate real time information flows. The costs of financial transactions were thereby reduced. Market mentality is influenced by returns and the potential for current returns to persist or increase. Since all investors have access to market information, as they rush into markets to chase (abnormal) returns, asset prices inflate creating a bubble. These bubbles have been observed in Asia between 1996 and 1997 and in the US in 2001 (dotcom) and, more recently, the global financial crisis of 2008 (housing bubble). In fact, the Dot Com bubble can be linked to the monetary policy response to the Asian financial crisis. The CL Group of Companies fell prey to the temptation of inflated asset prices that were close to the cusp of a bubble. In the course of the forensic audit, it was discovered that the conglomerate had overextended itself in high-risk investments with high interest debt and illiquid assets including real estate. These events are not new to the region given the experience of select Jamaican financial institutions between 1995 and 1997. The fact that the CL Group was able to pursue investment strategies similar to those of the failed Jamaican institutions without triggering appropriate warning reflects possible investor insensibility. Perhaps it also indicates the low capacity of the (state) agencies that are responsible for monitoring, regulating, and sanctioning the actions of institutions that operate in their jurisdiction. But these lapses ought not to be attributed without reservations to incompetence of the regulator. Regulatory regimes in market-based systems are based largely on self-reporting with verification by the regulator. Inherently, mechanisms that depend on self-reporting by firms introduce asymmetry and possibly inaccuracy in the information used by regulators. The effectiveness of regulation is, therefore, subject to the regulators’ ability to determine the credibility of the financial and other information submitted. In addition to concerns about regulatory capability, effective regulation is rapidly becoming the new public good. Governments have learnt the importance of this public good given that in the presence of windfall losses from malfunctioning financial markets, the state becomes the lender of first resort. More regulation in its current form will not prevent crises. In fact, it is not clear that any regulatory framework can prevent crises. During bubble and boom time, when investors are relatively carefree, regulators will have little incentive to apply the scrutiny necessary to safeguard the maximum number of investors; but, this is precisely when such scrutiny is of absolute necessity. What is needed is an accounting and financial system that facilitates analysis and assessment of trillions of financial transactions and any market movement across the globe that may indicate system stress. Better regulation requires adequate, accurate and timely information from the firms and banks that are under scrutiny. Further, given the context of the current global crisis, regulators would need to be able, through the use of appropriate firewalls, to contend with financial innovation as it develops in order to prevent interdependence from spreading contagion. The CL debacle was initiated by the unraveling international conditions; but it could have been mitigated if the lessons provided by the Jamaican events had been learnt. At the very least, the situation of overleveraged positions in illiquid assets that are mismatched with short-term deposits should have been detected by existing regulators had they learnt from the experience of other jurisdictions. At the minimum, investors would expect such detection by the regulators. Further, liquidity problems in one institution can jeopardize the stability of the entire system if the affected investors are able to motivate those with deposits in a relatively superior institution. Modern banks are opaque and complex, and it is hard for individual investors to assess and quantify the risks being undertaken. Investors assume, by just the fact of their existence, that regulators have adequate capacity to assist them in determining the soundness of their investments. The importance of effective regulation is reflected largely in the costs of a loss of confidence. As the impact of the 2008 crisis persists into 2009 and 2010, consumers/borrowers continue to resist all appeasements to re-enter goods and financial markets; and lenders are still hesitant to extend the credit required to reinvigorate economic activity.Taken together, these have implications for the potency of monetary policy. Pushing for regional regulation is likely to follow the road that regional efforts at integration have followed. Individual Central banks and regulatory agencies across the region are likely to resist attempts to reduce their control over the financial stability of their individual economies. Policymakers will however find it more useful to insist on the development of appropriate regulatory frameworks and mechanisms that interact both regionally and globally. Such regulatory frameworks and mechanisms would enable the adoption of best practices and, through information flows, develop the capacity of CARICOM regulators. Promoting cooperation whilst maintaining national responsibility for regulation might also be preferable since it can provide adequate incentives for each country to manage its affairs prudently in response to both local and regional system failure. Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 19 honourable Usain Bolt the Youngest Recipient of the Order of Jamaica. Look for more on this young iconic ‘Lightning Bolt’ in our next edition. 20 Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 Expanding Merida: Security cooperation agreement between Mexico and the United States Why the US needs to bring the Caribbean into its latest anti-narcotic initiatives By Karelle Samuda Karelle Samuda is a Research Associate at Leadership Africa, USA. This institution focuses on delivering leadership training to youth in Africa and the diaspora. Prior to joining Leadership Africa, Karelle was the Special Assistant to the President at the Center for Global Development. She also volunteers as Special Projects Coordinator with the Institute of Caribbean Studies. That Institute is an advocacy and education organization committed to advancing the interests of Caribbean Americans in US policy. It promotes programmes and policies that aid economic growth and development in the Caribbean. Karelle holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science from Washington and Lee University, and a Master of Public Policy degree in International Policy Development from Georgetown University. The illicit drug trade and its negative effects such as the drug wars in Mexico have emerged as early foreign policy issues in the Americas for the Obama Administration. During recent trips to Mexico by President Obama, Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, and other senior U.S. government officials, the United States announced initiatives to support Mexico’s efforts to tackle the drug wars. These initiatives include: a Financial Year (FY) 2009 Spring Supplemental request for $66 million to procure Blackhawk helicopters for the Mexican security forces; a plan to increase the number of agents and the amount of high-tech gear assigned to the U.S. border; and a request in the FY2010 budget for $450 million for anti-narcotics assistance to Mexico under the Merida Initiative. As the U.S. focuses on the drug wars in Mexico, it is imperative that there be also a strengthening of the relationship between the U.S. and the Caribbean region to tackle narco-trafficking in the Caribbean. The justification for such an initiative follows. A PROBLEM RE-STATEMENT A decline in narco-trade via one channel tends to lead to an increase in trafficking in another. Caribbean countries, located as they are between the world’s largest producers and consumers of cocaine, are extraordinarily vulnerable territories. Drug traffickers, anxious to get their product to the North American market, will take advantage of the permeability of the Caribbean region, unless there is sufficient attention paid by both the U.S. and the Caribbean region to minimizing the potential increase in drug trafficking through the Caribbean that is stimulated by the heightened security at the U.S.-Mexico border. The most recent report on drug trafficking patterns in the Americas shows a decline in cocaine trafficking through the Central America route and an increase through the Caribbean. These shifts are attributed to increased law enforcement action in the former, and the low levels of capacity to fund necessary law enforcement among governments of the latter. Unless there are complementary programmes aiding the Caribbean to combat effectively the negative effects of America’s tightening of its southern border, and increased anti-narcotic collaboration with Mexico, Caribbean societies face the danger of destabilization that comes with a flourishing drug trade, and have far less capacity than a country like Mexico to handle it. From America’s vantage point, the Caribbean becoming a major drug trade portal shifts the problem from drugs flowing into America from a few more or less centralized states to a situation in which the channels actually double as a result of the fragmentary geography of the region. SOLUTIONS There are two main ways the US can engage the Caribbean in combating the drug trade. Firstly, the Merida Initiative - as constituted at present - is a multiyear package of approximately $1.4 billion anti-drug assistance to Mexico, other Central American countries, Haiti and the Dominican Republic. In 2008, Congress appropriated $465 million for the first phase of the Merida Initiative – $400 million for Mexico and $65 million for Central America, Haiti and the Dominican Republic. To tackle the transnational nature of the drug trade in the Americas, the Merida Initiative needs to be expanded to include the other vulnerable Caribbean countries. This will not only allow for access to more support for the Caribbean region, but can also allow for the development and implementation of more targeted regional anti-narcotics strategies. Secondly, the various constraints on their security forces and justice systems make Caribbean countries particularly vulnerable to the illicit drug trade.There is a need for institutions such as the Inter-American Development Bank and the World Bank to work with these countries to implement reforms in these sectors. In 2006, the Inter-American Development Bank provided a $19.8 million loan to Guyana to address citizen security. A renewed focus on offering such services to the rest of the Caribbean region, with a particular goal of combating drug trafficking, should be a U.S. priority. The United States can use its bully pulpit to press these organizations to focus on police and justice reform as key areas of development for the Caribbean. CONCLUSION An increase in production and trafficking of drugs undermines the political stability and economic development of any country.The economic penalties are high. Such penalties include: reduced investment; declining revenues from tourism; and an increase in costs such as personal security and ransoms for kidnappings. The drug trade thrives because there is a demand for the product. As Secretary Clinton noted, “our insatiable demand for illegal drugs fuels the drug trade.” This means tackling the drug trade ought to be a shared responsibility. The Merida initiative is a commendable effort at giving effect to that shared responsibility. However, as it is currently constituted, it merely facilitates lopping off one head of the narcotrade Hydra, and leaves the opportunity for several new ones to spring up and take its place. Attempts to secure the Mexican border are laudable, but they must be complemented by efforts to help Caribbean nations secure their waters and borders. Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 21 r o F m d e o P A ny An Gran r e w o l A F anatan rS ca Amil I eventually understood that my mother never wanted Granny alone On her single chair Or in her jaded room Uttering to God Or an open window To relieve her of her misery On our blunt arrival, She slowly opened the impaired door And appeared as the wrinkled string of herring Reeking her dated kitchen. Her hidden eyes upheld a long silence Undisturbed by the creaking door (That was never fixed) There was once a time She sharply remembered our faces Calling us by our saint names: I could write that she was the affectionate grand- Joseph, Peter, Paul mother Serving us freshly squeezed grapefruit juice sprouting wisdom and stirring blocks of sugar and sweetening her evening tea Sliced apples, she beloved - It is not quite that simple She professed they only grew in December. I could paint a classic portrait hung on elderly walls Where rising louvers shoot streaks of light onto her luminous image - The recondite picture is far from perfect Mummy said “Granny was of a different time” By this she meant An older world that tarries the hindrance Of yesterdays Like the abstruseness of this village Countless poems wander particular sinuous tracks The blistering sun Ruined homes decaying She sat at the black unnoticed back of the church O how she entwined understanding of an exalted lighter complex Wrapped deftly in bloody sacred robe And the remote Latin declension descending the altar Mary, Mother of God Pray for us. St Martin de Porres Explain to us This awful tale and lingering sorrow. We rarely visited her but my mother forever grateful to her aunt Sometimes stopped by her pitiful home Which bakes heat of the grilling sun Held on feeble bricks. 22 Courtesy: Nikhail Ramkarran Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 The neglected black faces peeping through ventilation blocks My granny sat blandly I observed the whispering memoir from all angles She conversed about the old cultured buildings of Port-Of-Spain And the forbidding doors casting her buried reflection While she fixed her wavy hair and purse She savoured the depressing shade beneath the arrogant balcony nose And applauded the building for its manners Her language was echoingly Victorian Stressing “proper” speech and sibilant sounds She told us our uncouth native tongue Belonged to the buzzing of the flies in the dutty latrine Of the backyard In her decrepit house She never exult the rose beds of her nieces blooming to convent But she flourished how well they were raised The reduced price volume collection of encyclopaedia books Dust bound its pages. Gold faded titles More precious and shiny than her polite eyes Fell upon her trembling lips. She cooked the best roast pork and stew pigeon peas She only glorified her prized tea plates chipped by the cruelty of Europe And she insisted the that imbibing saucers were to be placed under our rebellious glasses, We never stained the second hand mahogany furniture set. Granny detained herself in an awkward prism And the native sound of banana birds Crept her skin Everyday she wore these old world poems in outlandish metres That defied the rhythm of the intruding knocking on her broken door Belting road march in February The sizzling of the heat throughout the house and fierce latrine flies yelling the song of shit. She wore her short sleeved high neck Cotton flower carpeted dress And a pouch of silver shillings For twenty-five cent pieces. I gathered the surviving ashes of her wretched home And rubbed it into my skin. Everyday, I wear these poems And I see her unravel an empire of flowers from her palm While her eyes water the very seeds That bloom on some fresh soil Of another time. Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 23 A Drowning T Vladimir Lucien he unshorn heads of fishermen Move from side to side on the bouncing waves Like thuribles amidst the smoke of sea spray. A man, Phillip, sat on the jetty that lay upon the sea Like a fallen gravestone with no epilogue, Awaiting its respective corpse; his woes Swiveling in the auricle of a conchshell. Everyday we had come here together And watched our childhoods ebb with the sea, Until the wind dabbed the white cowlicks Rising above the ocean’s creased forehead, And the Acacia trees would shudder seeing their deaths In their fallen shadows under the midday sun. Those pious footprints of childhood on this beach Are no longer ours, neither is this sand. No longer do we believe that the horizon Is the Lord’s fishing line, catching the drowned. Yet in this orange village of sunset, We can sit on the jetty where Phillip sat, Watching the sea moved to and fro By the breath of the restless drowned. Watching the upwardly wept tears of the sea, Until the salt silks of the wind burn our eyes, And we shed our own tears, knowing That our loves will always crystallize in salt. 24 Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 Transitions Romona Carrico Twisting and turning, With wings spread wide A rapturous eagle soars on high As naked effulgent sprays Reflected lakes of candy clouds Disclosing nature’s diversity When sunlight quilts the sky As the somnolent sun morphs The land into a liquid field of gold The shadowy banks accentuated crimson rivers While mountaintops reflected visions of sentinels In the silky breeze of the expectant night Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 25 Poisoned Arts By William Kippins From the dawn of arts In these Caribbean parts We took pride in telling our stories, In small groups we gathered In an orderly manner telling tales Of our victories and sad stories, 26 Our voices were heard through LP records in dance-halls, radio stations At home and abroad, Profound and deep was our musical leap With Reggae’s new sound The climb was no longer steep, Many a time we recited these lines With camp fires at night Where our words took flight As rhyme dance and song Shine their creative light, Now dancehall has come With its uncoated displays No messages to decipher From any encrypted tales, As time progressed With our Caribbean finesse New ways were invented For creative protest, Creativity has died With our once focused intent To deliver our creed Onto youthful minds to augment, Then Reggae dawned A broader canvas to paint on The issues we could only voice In our songs, Lets with care unravel This misguided snarl To retrieve and refurbish This new innovative style And continue on our road to A united Caribbean vibe. Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 ISSN 2077-7043 © 2009 Caribbean Community Secretariat. All rights reserved. While the introduction, copyright in the selection and editorial material is vested in the editors of the Integration Quarterly, copyright in the individual articles belongs to their respective authors. Contributing Editors: Ms. Myrtle Chuck-A-Sang Mr. Learrie Barry Ms. Yolanda Collins Mr. Haslyn Parris Mr. Ruel Johnson Photography in part by Nikhil Ramkarran. Layout by Cirrus Multimedia. Integration Quarterly - September/ December, 2009 27 The UWI-CARICOM Project is a mechanism established by the University of the West Indies (UWI) and the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Secretariat to help inform the CARICOM decision making process, Caribbean leaders and tertiary institutions, of the range of issues and initiatives which inform Caribbean growth and development. The Project provides CARICOM , the Caribbean Diaspora and the international community with pertinent perspectives on the Caribbean Community and the work of its Secretariat through the provision of research based literature on regional integration and development published in the Project’s ‘Integrationist’ Journal Series. A high priority for the UWI-CARICOM Project is reaching nationals of the Caribbean Community at all levels to aid essential understanding of how the integration process impacts their lives. The content of every book, paper, journal, documentary or cultural Programme produced is intended to awaken the consciousness of CARICOM people into achieving the vision of an integrated Caribbean. ISSN 2077-7043 COPYRIGHT INFORMATION All Correspondence should be addressed to: Project Director UWI-CARICOM Project Caribbean Community Secretariat Turkeyen Greater Georgetown Guyana © 2009 Caribbean Community Secretariat All rights reserved. While the introduction, copyright in the selection and editorial material is vested in the editors of the Integration Quarterly, copyright in the individual articles belongs to their respective authors. Contributing Editors: Ms. Myrtle Chuck-A-Sang Mr. Learrie Barry Ms. Yolanda Collins Mr. Haslyn Parris Mr. Ruel Johnson Photography in part by Nikhil Ramkarran. Layout by Cirrus Multimedia.