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  • Afro - descendants
  • Agriculture
    Paragraphes Relatifs au Thème
    • Rapports
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 23
    National Food and Nutrition Policy

    The CARICOM Secretariat in collaboration with the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) has facilitated the development of a Regional Food and Nutrition Security Policy which was approved by the Council for Trade and Economic Development (COTED) at its special meeting on Agriculture held in October, 2010. The FAO has now given its commitment to assisting with the development of National Food and Nutrition Security (NFNS) Policies and Strategies.

    Barbados has already approached the FAO for assistance with preparing its own National. FNS Policy and Plan which will be coordinated by the MAFFI in collaboration with the National Nutrition Centre of the Ministry of Health. This Policy will be multi-sectoral in nature and will therefore involve national consultations with the various government departments, stakeholders in the farming communities, NGOs, and other private sector organizations.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 24
    Market Information

    As it relates to the marketing of agricultural commodities in Barbados, this is done primarily in an ad hoc manner, with there being limited planning and market information to inform production levels. In this regard, the MAFFI is in the process of engaging the assistance of a number of International agencies who already have a stated interest, in addition to the necessary expertise, in establishing Market Information Systems. The Ministry of Agriculture has been working closely with the Inter-American Institute for
    Cooperation in Agriculture (IlCA) in addressing this issue. IlCA has included this and other areas into its four year Country Strategy for Barbados, while the FAO and a number of other United Nations agencies (the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development [UNCTAD] and CTA Community have pledged varying levels of support.

    CARICOM has been mandated to establish a regional Market Information System. A meeting was convened during the month of February 2011, in Trinidad and Tobago to develop the elements of the regional MIS (Market Information Systems) framework, action plans and initiatives for the implementation the regional MIS. The main recommendations emanating from the meeting regarding the way forward for the regional Market Intelligence System were:
    • The NAMDEVCO/NAMIS model should be pursued by member states.
    This is a successful system being used by Trinidad and Tobago
    • That the regional MIS system would be housed by NAMDEVCO since they
    have the most functional system in the region in addition to having the
    expertise and experience with managing an MIS system.
    • That member states should give priority to the establishment of their
    national MIS.

    A technical working group was formed to finalise the planning for the establishment of
    the regional MIS. (Barbados has two representatives in this group)
  • Amélioration de la gestion publique
  • Commerce
    Paragraphes Relatifs au Thème
    • Rapports
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 14
    Trade

    Barbados has always been committed to an open, transparent and rules-based multilateral trading system. To this end, Barbados has been a member of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) since that organisation was established on January 1,1995.

    Barbados has joined like-minded countries in the WTO in an effort to ensure that our concerns are taken on board and appropriate responses framed to those concerns.

    In the regard, Barbados is the coordinator of the group of Small Vulnerable Economies, whose efforts are geared towards ensuring that the inherent characteristics of the smallest members of the WTO are recognised and that these states are not marginalised by the results of the ongoing Doha Round of negotiations.

    The work of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade is structured in order to ensure that the appropriate infrastructure is implemented and capacity is built which will permit Barbados to derive benefit from participation in the multilateral trading system and expanded trade.
  • Coopération publique et privée
    Paragraphes Relatifs au Thème
    • Rapports
    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 8
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
  • Démocratie
    Paragraphes Relatifs au Thème
    • Rapports
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 2
    The Social Policy Committee of the Cabinet

    The Social Policy Committee of the Cabinet has been established to coordinate the work
    of the social sector and fast track decision-maldng. It is therefore charged to consider
    social policy issues within the purviews, inter alia, of health, education, housing,
    employment and welfare. The membership of the Committee comprises the Ministers
    under whose portfolios these issues fall. Policy Papers informing on growing trends in
    the social sector, emerging challenges and new initiatives are submitted to this
    Committee where they are discussed in detailed. Recommendations concerning the
    formulation and implementation of policies and strategies to deal with these matters are
    also examined and any adjustments made as necessary.

    The Inter-Ministry Task Force to Monitor and Strengthen the Social Safety
    Net

    This Inter-Ministry Task Force provides a framework for the management of social risks.
    It is seen as an integral part of social protection and allows for a fully coordinated
    sectoral approach to the provision of social services. Its establishment is aimed at
    strengthening the social protection network and minimising duplication and
    fragmentation in the social service delivery system. Its specific task is to identify the ongoing
    risks posed to the vulnerable so that strategies can be put in place to prevent or
    minimize dislocation, displacement and exclusion and improve coping mechanisms.
    Membership of the Inter-Ministry Task Force is drawn from among the technical staff of
    the relevant Ministries and Departments and is chaired by the Minister of Social Care.
    Members of the Social Policy Committee of the Cabinet are also in attendance as
    necessary.

    To date, members of the Inter-Ministry Task Force have been sharing information
    concerning the roles and responsibilities of their agencies; assisting with the formulation
    of policy and programmes to deal with issues identified; participating in various
    activities etc. An important achievement has been the creation of a data base of the
    services offered by agencies serving on the Task Force.

    Mainstreaming Participatory Governance

    Participatory governance is being pursued by government through what is being referred
    as the Constituency Empowerment Programme. This Programme can be described as a
    local governance system, bounded by the geography of the enumeration districts, which
    strengthens the capacity of citizens to bring about positive change at the individual and
    community levels, thus contributing to sustainable development at the national level. It
    has three (3) dimensions. Politically it is seen as a platform for promoting development
    and an avenue through which Barbadians can participate in the decision-maldng process
    and hence contribute to national development. Socially, it is a strategy to increase the
    effectiveness of development programmes, since the programmes are undertaken in
    response to the needs of the constituency which have been identified and prioritised by
    its residents. Economically, it allows for a more efficient delivery of services to the
    residents and the constituency as the level of bureaucracy will decrease. It also permits
    the creation of local livelihoods as residents with the required skills will be on the
    frontline of employment opportunities within their respective constituencies.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 2
    Mainstreaming Participatory Governance

    Participatory governance is being pursued by government through what is being referred
    as the Constituency Empowerment Programme. This Programme can be described as a
    local governance system, bounded by the geography of the enumeration districts, which
    strengthens the capacity of citizens to bring about positive change at the individual and
    community levels, thus contributing to sustainable development at the national level. It
    has three (3) dimensions. Politically it is seen as a platform for promoting development
    and an avenue through which Barbadians can participate in the decision-maldng process
    and hence contribute to national development. Socially, it is a strategy to increase the
    effectiveness of development programmes, since the programmes are undertaken in
    response to the needs of the constituency which have been identified and prioritised by
    its residents. Economically, it allows for a more efficient delivery of services to the
    residents and the constituency as the level of bureaucracy will decrease. It also permits
    the creation of local livelihoods as residents with the required skills will be on the
    frontline of employment opportunities within their respective constituencies.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 5
    The objective of the Constituency Empowerment Programme is the broadening of the
    participatory character of governance in Barbados with the view to ensuring the
    equitable development of Barbadian society. It favours a ''bottom-up'' approach to
    development and provides the platform on which the social upliftrnent and the
    empowerment of all citizens will be pursued. AIl such it is seen as an important aspect of
    the Government's overall poverty reduction strategy.

    The Constituency Empowerment Programme has been operationalised by the
    establishment of thirty (30) Constituency Councils, one in each Constituency. The
    membership of each Constituency Council comprises fifteen (15) persons drawn from the
    respective constituencies. They represent faith-based organisations and other civil
    society organisations as well as individuals who have been nominated by their respective
    constituencies. Major political parties are also represented on the Council. These
    Councils are expected to partner with their constituents and together find solutions to
    local problems. Each Council receives an allocation of $100,000 per annum to finance
    their respective programmes.

    The Councils are supported administratively by the Department of Constituency
    Empowerment. The Officers of this Department are available to give guidance, conduct
    training and give financial oversight. The Department also provides the link between the
    Councils and the Ministry as well as other agencies with which the Councils need to
    interact. The Department also monitors the functioning of the Protocols which have
    been established with these Agencies and fast-tracks any referrals. A volunteer
    programme is also being developed as part of the Programme to further extend the reach
    of the Councils.

    Programmes undertal,en by the Councils to date include the conducting of educational
    programmes for children and young people; training in the area of entrepreneurial
    development; clean-up and beautification campaigns; recreational activities; the clearing
    of wells to mitigate flooding especially during the rainy season; and response to
    emergency matters. Support to community-based organisations, including sporting
    organisations has also been forthcoming.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 78
    STRENGTHENING DEMOCRATIC GOVERNANCE
    Electoral Processes and Procedures
    Barbados remains committed to maintaining electoral processes of the highest integrity and transparency as guaranteed under Section 41 of the Constitution of Barbados. There is a continuous registration process and the Register of Electors is published on January 31 every year so that citizens can confirm that their names are on the Register. General Elections are constitutionally due every five years and are
    held within the period due. The last such elections were held in 2008.
    Elections in Barbados are managed by the Electoral and Boundaries Commission, established by an Act of Parliament and comprising a Chairman, Deputy Chairman and three other Commissioners. The Conduct of elections is governed by the Representation of the People Act Cap. 12 of the Laws of Barbados and the Representation of the People (Registration of Electors) Regulations, 1990, which
    provide the election process from the issue to the return of the Writ.
    Several of Barbados election officials have served in Election Observer Missions both regionally and internationally, however, as a result of Barbados's reputation for free, fair and transparent elections, to date, there has been no request from International Organizations for Election Observers to be present at Barbados elections.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 1
    STRENGTHENING DEMOCRATIC GOVERNANCE
    Electoral Processes and Procedures
    Barbados remains committed to maintaining electoral processes of the highest integrity and transparency as guaranteed under Section 41 of the Constitution of Barbados. There is a continuous registration process and the Register of Electors is published on January 31 every year so that citizens can confirm that their names are on the Register. General Elections are constitutionally due every five years and are
    held within the period due. The last such elections were held in 2008.
    Elections in Barbados are managed by the Electoral and Boundaries Commission, established by an Act of Parliament and comprising a Chairman, Deputy Chairman and three other Commissioners. The Conduct of elections is governed by the Representation of the People Act Cap. 12 of the Laws of Barbados and the Representation of the People (Registration of Electors) Regulations, 1990, which
    provide the election process from the issue to the return of the Writ.
  • Développement économique durable
    Paragraphes Relatifs au Thème
    • Rapports
    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 7
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 7
    Conscious of the impact of the global recession on the country and the implications this
    has for the poor and the vulnerable, the Barbados Government has scaled-up its efforts
    to combat poverty in all its dimensions and remains steadfastly committed to
    strengthening efforts to reduce social disparities and inequality and to halve extreme
    poverty by the year 2015. This has been done essentially to safeguard the level of
    progress made as a nation and to maintain the quality of life that Barbadians have been
    able to enjoy, especially over the last four decades. To this end, institutional frameworks
    are being strengthened and participatory governance is being mainstreamed. Social
    protection is receiving special attention with the emphasis being shifted from that of
    mere stabilisation to that of the empowerment of the poor and those persons at risk
    including Persons with Disabilities and Older Persons. The goal of these strategies is to
    promote human prosperity and in the process, ensure sustainable economic growth and
    maintain social development.

    Institutional Frameworks

    Given its configuration, it is understood that the current global economic and financial
    crisis will further expose Barbados' economy to external shocks that will test the capacity
    of its resilience and ability to cope. Further, if not correctly handled, the situation has
    the potential to erode some of the gains made over the years in the social sector and slow
    progress in the effort to empower the poor and the indigent. As a consequence,
    Government was required to talce a pro-active stance, and to adopt an integrated
    approach to the delivery of social services to mitigate the negative impact of the crisis.
    Among the responses of Government was the establishment of two institutional
    frameworks, the Social Policy Committee of the Cabinet and the Inter-Ministry Task
    Force to Monitor and Strengthen the Social Safety Net.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 13
    Mainstreaming Participatory Governance

    Participatory governance is being pursued by government through what is being referred
    as the Constituency Empowerment Programme. This Programme can be described as a
    local governance system, bounded by the geography of the enumeration districts, which
    strengthens the capacity of citizens to bring about positive change at the individual and
    community levels, thus contributing to sustainable development at the national level. It
    has three (3) dimensions. Politically it is seen as a platform for promoting development
    and an avenue through which Barbadians can participate in the decision-maldng process
    and hence contribute to national development. Socially, it is a strategy to increase the
    effectiveness of development programmes, since the programmes are undertaken in
    response to the needs of the constituency which have been identified and prioritised by
    its residents. Economically, it allows for a more efficient delivery of services to the
    residents and the constituency as the level of bureaucracy will decrease. It also permits
    the creation of local livelihoods as residents with the required skills will be on the
    frontline of employment opportunities within their respective constituencies.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 13, 20
    Programmes undertaken by the Councils to date include the conducting of educational
    programmes for children and young people; training in the area of entrepreneurial
    development; clean-up and beautification campaigns; recreational activities; the clearing
    of wells to mitigate flooding especially during the rainy season; and response to
    emergency matters. Support to community-based organisations, including sporting
    organisations has also been forthcoming.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 13
    Website Development

    The Website as developed will provide information on the services of the Ministry and its
    Agencies. Ultimately, application forms to access the various services will be made
    available on line.

    The Country Assessment of Living Conditions had four main components. These were
    the Survey of Living Conditions, a Participatory Poverty Assessment, an Institutional
    Assessment and a Macro Social and Economic Assessment. This Assessment is expected
    to inform on the extent and cause of poverty in Barbados and the existing poverty line. It
    will also chronicle the experience of persons living in poverty and evaluate the
    institutions that deliver the services.

    The field work for the assessment is completed. The findings are being compiled and the
    first draft of the report is expected to be ready for submission in June 2011. As a follow-up,
    a Poverty Eradication Action Plan will be formulated.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 12
    Promotion of Continuous Training Programmes in Conjunction with Workers' Representatives and the Private Sector to enable Workers to respond to the Demands of the Labour Market.

    The Ministry of Labour through its Barbados Vocational Training Board continues to consult with employers in industry in the structuring of training programmes to facilitate the moulding of a graduate that can adequately respond to the demands of employers as they enter the labour market. In addition, the Board continues to promote apprenticeship training where training is delivered at the employers' workplace. Other areas of collaboration with both the private sector and workers' representatives include:
    - development of curricula;
    - establishment of technical committees;
    - membership on the Board of Directors of the Barbados Vocational Training Board.
  • Développement social
    Paragraphes Relatifs au Thème
    • Rapports
    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 1
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 2
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 5
    MDG 1: Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
    The Ministry of Social Care, Constituency Empowerment and Community Development designs and implements programmes and projects that address the following:
    The National Assistance Programme
    The National Assistance Programme is offered by the Welfare Department. This programme provides assistance to poor and vulnerable citizens who are unable to earn a living to support themselves and their dependents because of illness, injury or other special circumstance. The National Assistance programme has two components:
    i. Monetary Assistance/Cash Transfers: This allows poor and vulnerable individuals to meet their daily needs; and
    ii. Assistance-in-Kind: This comprises the provision of food vouchers, dentures, spectacles, clothing, hearing aids, prostheses, furniture, the facilitation of burials, the payment of house and land rents and utility bills – water and electricity.
    The National Assistance Programme endeavours to provide an opportunity for needy citizens to meet their needs and improve their social condition through the provision of financial assistance and assistance in kind.

    Poverty Reduction Empowerment Programme
    The Poverty Reduction Empowerment Programme (PREP) provides skills training to clients of the welfare department to facilitate their personal development and give them an opportunity to utilize these marketable skills to elevate themselves from a status of dependency to independence through employment. This programme responds to the realization that it is not enough to simply provide the poor and vulnerable with hand-outs but it is also vital that they are provided with opportunities to develop and expand their capabilities and lift themselves out of poverty. PREP aims to enhance personal and social development; increase knowledge and skills; promote the transfer of learning; promote job retention; and enhance and developing self-efficacy.
    Identification – Stabilization – Enablement – Empowerment (I.S.E.E.) Bridge Pilot Project
    The Country Assessment of Living Conditions (CALC) is a national study which was conducted in 2010 using quantitative and qualitative research to assess the current conditions affecting the welfare of people living in Barbados. The study indicated that despite a large number of social services offered to reduce poverty many individuals have been unable to break the cycle of poverty and as a result there are large numbers of poor multi-generational households. The I.S.E.E. Bridge project aims to reduce intergenerational poverty, using the household as the focal point of intervention to improve the overall quality of life of poor and vulnerable household members. This programme represents a paradigm shift in the efforts to reduce poverty in Barbados and it moves away from the traditional emphasis of “stabilizing” to that of “empowering” the poor and the vulnerable. The intervention focusses on four critical areas:
    i. Identification/Assessment: Where the poor and vulnerable are identified and their needs assessed.
    ii. Stabilization: The immediate needs are addressed.
    iii. Enablement: Where skills to survive are imparted.
    iv. Empowerment: Where individuals are imbued with the capacity to succeed and excel in society.

    The overall objective of the project is to Build a Road for Individual Development towards the Goal of Empowerment (BRIDGE).
    The programme is built on seven pillars of intervention, namely; i) Personal Identification, Health Promotion, Education and Human Resource Development, Employment, Income/Social Benefits, Housing Conditions and Family Dynamics. Minimum conditions are attached to each pillar which household members are required to meet before graduating from the programme. This process is supported by intense psycho-social support.

    MDG 2 – Achieve universal primary education
    Since the 1970s, Barbados attained universal access to primary education and this has been maintained. There have been consistently high levels of pupil participation by both sexes which has corresponded with high completion rates and high effective transition rates for pupils from primary education to secondary education.

    MDG 3 – Promote Gender Equality and Empower Women
    The Bureau of Gender Affairs (BGA) is the national machinery responsible for the integration of gender in all national policies and programmes. The BGA functions to mainstream gender and to ensure the integration of gender and development into all areas of national development plans and policies so that women and men can benefit equally from existing opportunities.
    Gender mainstreaming is an integral component of the Bureau’s activities. A number of training and sensitisation programmes are implemented to expand gender awareness and promote social change at the community level which will remove barriers to the attainment of gender equality. Gender sensitivity programmes are also implemented within primary and secondary educational institutions to increase awareness of gender issues among children with a view to promoting harmonious future generations.
    A major accomplishment of the Bureau of Gender Affairs is the National Policy on Gender, which will form the framework of the major work of the Bureau over the next five years. The development of the policy is in the final stages and the policy document should be completed by 2015. This policy will act as the guiding framework through which gender perspectives are being brought to the forefront of national planning, legislation, programmes and activities in order to advance development.

    MDG 4: Reduce child mortality
    Antenatal and child-health services in the polyclinics and the Neonatal and Paediatric Intensive Care Units at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital were instrumental in improving infant survival rates. Nurses received specialist training in neo-natal care to complement these services.
    Perinatal conditions and congenital abnormalities were the leading cause of death among children under 1 year old. Infant mortality rate per 1,000 live births (less than 1 year) was 10.7 in 2012 while neonatal (0 to 27 days) infant mortality rate was 8.3, and the post-neonatal (28 days to <1 year) infant mortality rate was 2.5.
    The health of infants and children is dependent on controlling the incidence of vaccine preventable diseases and Barbados has been successful in meeting international targets in this area. In 2013, Barbados was awarded the Caribbean Public Health Agency shield for excellent surveillance for immunization diseases under the Expanded Programme for Immunization (EPI). The country continues to maintain zero cases of polio, neonatal tetanus, measles, rubella, yellow fever and congenital rubella syndrome. Over the past two decades immunization coverage has been consistently high, between 90-93%.
    New vaccines added to the EPI include Hepatitis B, Haemophilus Influenza, Pneumococcal and Varicella. The most recent of these, the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) vaccine, was included in the immunization programme in January 2014. Initially girls eleven years and over in twenty-three (23) secondary schools were given the vaccine and preparation is now being made for the inoculation of a second cohort of girls.
    The programme for the Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission of HIV (PMTCT) started in Barbados in 1995. Prior to its implementation, HIV transmission rates to infants exposed to HIV was 27.1%. However, by 2012, HIV transmission rates were reduced to less than 1%.
    PART - 1 -
    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 5
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 9
    Social Care

    Conscious of the impact of the global recession on the country and the implications this
    has for the poor and the vulnerable, the Barbados Government has scaled-up its efforts
    to combat poverty in all its dimensions and remains steadfastly committed to
    strengthening efforts to reduce social disparities and inequality and to halve extreme
    poverty by the year 2015. This has been done essentially to safeguard the level of
    progress made as a nation and to maintain the quality of life that Barbadians have been
    able to enjoy, especially over the last four decades. To this end, institutional frameworks
    are being strengthened and participatory governance is being mainstreamed. Social
    protection is receiving special attention with the emphasis being shifted from that of
    mere stabilisation to that of the empowerment of the poor and those persons at risk
    including Persons with Disabilities and Older Persons. The goal of these strategies is to
    promote human prosperity and in the process, ensure sustainable economic growth and
    maintain social development.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 4, 8
    The Social Policy Committee of the Cabinet

    The Social Policy Committee of the Cabinet has been established to coordinate the work
    of the social sector and fast track decision-maldng. It is therefore charged to consider
    social policy issues within the purviews, inter alia, of health, education, housing,
    employment and welfare. The membership of the Committee comprises the Ministers
    under whose portfolios these issues fall. Policy Papers informing on growing trends in
    the social sector, emerging challenges and new initiatives are submitted to this
    Committee where they are discussed in detailed. Recommendations concerning the
    formulation and implementation of policies and strategies to deal with these matters are
    also examined and any adjustments made as necessary.

    The Inter-Ministry Task Force to Monitor and Strengthen the Social Safety
    Net

    This Inter-Ministry Task Force provides a framework for the management of social risks.
    It is seen as an integral part of social protection and allows for a fully coordinated
    sectoral approach to the provision of social services. Its establishment is aimed at
    strengthening the social protection network and minimising duplication and
    fragmentation in the social service delivery system. Its specific task is to identify the ongoing
    risks posed to the vulnerable so that strategies can be put in place to prevent or
    minimize dislocation, displacement and exclusion and improve coping mechanisms.
    Membership of the Inter-Ministry Task Force is drawn from among the technical staff of
    the relevant Ministries and Departments and is chaired by the Minister of Social Care.
    Members of the Social Policy Committee of the Cabinet are also in attendance as
    necessary.

    To date, members of the Inter-Ministry Task Force have been sharing information
    concerning the roles and responsibilities of their agencies; assisting with the formulation
    of policy and programmes to deal with issues identified; participating in various
    activities etc. An important achievement has been the creation of a data base of the
    services offered by agencies serving on the Task Force.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 10
    The Inter-Ministry Task Force to Monitor and Strengthen the Social Safety
    Net

    This Inter-Ministry Task Force provides a framework for the management of social risks.
    It is seen as an integral part of social protection and allows for a fully coordinated
    sectoral approach to the provision of social services. Its establishment is aimed at
    strengthening the social protection network and minimising duplication and
    fragmentation in the social service delivery system. Its specific task is to identify the ongoing
    risks posed to the vulnerable so that strategies can be put in place to prevent or
    minimize dislocation, displacement and exclusion and improve coping mechanisms.
    Membership of the Inter-Ministry Task Force is drawn from among the technical staff of
    the relevant Ministries and Departments and is chaired by the Minister of Social Care.
    Members of the Social Policy Committee of the Cabinet are also in attendance as
    necessary.

    To date, members of the Inter-Ministry Task Force have been sharing information
    concerning the roles and responsibilities of their agencies; assisting with the formulation
    of policy and programmes to deal with issues identified; participating in various
    activities etc. An important achievement has been the creation of a data base of the
    services offered by agencies serving on the Task Force.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 4
    The objective of the Constituency Empowerment Programme is the broadening of the
    participatory character of governance in Barbados with the view to ensuring the
    equitable development of Barbadian society. It favours a ''bottom-up'' approach to
    development and provides the platform on which the social upliftrnent and the
    empowerment of all citizens will be pursued. AIl such it is seen as an important aspect of
    the Government's overall poverty reduction strategy.

    The Constituency Empowerment Programme has been operationalised by the
    establishment of thirty (30) Constituency Councils, one in each Constituency. The
    membership of each Constituency Council comprises fifteen (15) persons drawn from the
    respective constituencies. They represent faith-based organisations and other civil
    society organisations as well as individuals who have been nominated by their respective
    constituencies. Major political parties are also represented on the Council. These
    Councils are expected to partner with their constituents and together find solutions to
    local problems. Each Council receives an allocation of $100,000 per annum to finance
    their respective programmes.

    The Councils are supported administratively by the Department of Constituency
    Empowerment. The Officers of this Department are available to give guidance, conduct
    training and give financial oversight. The Department also provides the link between the
    Councils and the Ministry as well as other agencies with which the Councils need to
    interact. The Department also monitors the functioning of the Protocols which have
    been established with these Agencies and fast-tracks any referrals. A volunteer
    programme is also being developed as part of the Programme to further extend the reach
    of the Councils.

    Programmes undertal,en by the Councils to date include the conducting of educational
    programmes for children and young people; training in the area of entrepreneurial
    development; clean-up and beautification campaigns; recreational activities; the clearing
    of wells to mitigate flooding especially during the rainy season; and response to
    emergency matters. Support to community-based organisations, including sporting
    organisations has also been forthcoming.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 4, 8, 9
    Enhancement of Social Protection Strategies

    Poverty in Barbados is considered to be relative rather than extreme as defined by
    international development institutions. The country also boasts of having one of the
    most comprehensive social safety nets in the Caribbean. However there are pockets of
    poverty which appear to be generational that are deemed unacceptable. Breaking this
    cycle of poverty has been difficult in that strategies tended to stop at stabilising acute
    situations rather than transforming them. Hence many of the persons falling victim to
    intergenerational poverty made little effort to emerge from their state of dependency.
    Recognising this, Barbados has sought to move away from the concept of dependence on
    welfare to that of empowerment. To this end, new interventionist approaches have been
    adopted which are supported by the use of information management systems and
    technology as well as research. National Assistance rates have also been increased.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 8
    The ISEE Bridge Programme, which captures the operational framework guiding
    interventions in the Personal Social Services Sector, is an initiative aimed at reducing
    intergenerational poverty. Its introduction was based on the conclusion that more
    attention needs to be placed on the household as a focal point of intervention to improve
    the quality of life of the poor and vulnerable within the household if intergenerational
    poverty is to be reduced/eliminated.
    A Pilot Programme, targeting 30 households will commence in July 2011 in association
    with the Organisation of American States. The intervention will include intensive
    psycho-social support as well as assistance from other agencies of Government and Civil
    Society to address the expressed needs of the identified households. The Programme will
    ultimately assist in strengthening the intervention methodologies utilised by the Welfare
    Department.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 9
    Information Management and Research

    A barrier to efficient and effective delivery of social services has been the inability to
    retrieve existing data to inform policy and enhance the social service delivery system. To
    this end, the setting up of a National Social Care Information Management System is
    being pursued and a Website activated. A Country Assessment of Living Conditions has
    also been conducted.

    National Social Care Information Management System (NASCIMS)

    Acknowledging that the global environment has evolved as a knowledge-based society,
    development policy and strategies are becoming increasingly dependent on the flow of
    intelligent up-to-date information. Given the nature, scope of work and potential impact
    on national development, the mandate of the Ministry of Social Care, Constituency
    Empowerment and Community Development - with six (6) critical departments and a
    staff complement of approximately four hundred (400) persons, there was an urgent
    need of a technologically advanced, network. The process of setting up this network has
    begun. When completed, it will efficiently and effectively share vital information for the
    conducting of the work of the Ministry.

    The establishment of NASCIMS will allow for service excellence to clients and the
    general public. It will also provide for up-to-date information on the status of social
    development in Barbados and inform policy-making and development strategies, It is
    anticipated that there will be the connectivity of all departments.; the expedition of
    information sharing; accurate departmental statistics; the efficient transmission of
    information; remote access of files and resources; and the centralization of information
    and data on shared servers where it is managed for confidentiality and security.
    NASCIMS will also greatly assist with client tracking.

    To facilitate this initiative, all Departments under the Ministry are being computerised.
    It is hoped that eventually all Agencies will be linked to allow for information sharing,
    case conferences, etc.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 10
    Budget allocations to assistance in-kind have also been increased to meet the demand
    coming from persons who may not be on welfare, but who may be at risk in the current
    circumstances. At present, assistance in-kind includes the payment of utility bills,
    (water and electricity) house and land rent, food vouchers, clothing, educational
    assistance (books, uniforms etc.), spectacles, dentures and prostheses.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 4, 8
    Poverty Reduction Empowerment Programme

    The Poverty Reduction Empowerment Programme represents an improvement of the existing Welfare to Work Programme. It is part of the overall empowerment programme offered in the treatment model to recipients of National Assistance and those persons at risk. Clients are offered skills training opportunities to equip themselves for the world of work. Personal development training is also part of the programme. It is based on the philosophy that persons can earn their way out of poverty.

    The scaled-up version of the programme will include job placements and work experience as well as psycho-social support. It will also be an integral part of the ISEE Bridge Programme.
  • Diversité culturelle
    Paragraphes Relatifs au Thème
    • Rapports
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 44
    Culture

    Barbados, as Vice Chair of the OAS Inter-American Committee on Culture, participated in the drafting of paragraph 44 of the Declaration of Port of Spain.

    Cultural Diversity- Activities in Relation to the OAS Inter-American Committee on Culture

    The Inter-American Committee on Culture (CIC) serves as a forum for discussion at the technical - policy level for matters of Culture. It comprises representatives from Ministries of Culture and highest appropriate authorities of OAS Member States. Its main function is to coordinate and to monitor the implementation of the mandates of the Declarations and Plans of Action of the Ministerial Meetings on Culture, as well as of
    those that emanate from the Summits of the Americas. The Technical Secretariat of CIC is the Office of Education and Culture of the OAS.

    a) Barbados, as Vice Chair of the Inter-American Committee on Culture (CIC), has been intimately involved in the formulation and the implementation of the Work Plan of the CIC.

    b) Barbados hosted the Fourth Meeting of Inter-American American Ministers of Culture and Highest Appropriate Authorities in November, 2008.

    Preservation of Cultural Heritage

    c) Barbados is signatory to all of the UNESCO Cultural Conventions, including the 2005 Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions.

    d) The Preservation of Antiquities and Relics Bill will be enacted before the end of 2011.

    e) The Cultural Industries Development Bill should be enacted within the next five months.

    f) Barbados is seeking the inscription of "Historic Bridgetown and its Garrison" on the UNESCO World Heritage List. The final decision on this nomination will be taken at the Meeting of the World Heritage Committee in June, 2011.

    g) It is also proposed to restore the Carnegie Library. In 1904, Scottish-American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie donated a grant to sponsor the construction of a dedicated free library in Barbados. Carnegie's grants established free libraries in the United Kingdom, the United States, South Africa, Australasia, and the Caribbean and were part of his global, transnational efforts to promote free public access to knowledge and ideas. The building, located on Coleridge Street, is one of six Carnegie libraries established in the Caribbean. In 1906, the Carnegie Library was the first of his public libraries outside of North America and the United Kingdom to open to the public. It is a coral stone building built in the
    English Renaissance style. The Library is now part of the National Library Service (established 1985), which is a major repository for Barbadiana print and non-print documents dating to the 18th century.

    h) The "Steel Shed" in Queen's Park in Bridgetown has been restored. This building played a critical role in the building of a modern Barbados and was the place where many voices were heard for the first time. The Right Excellent Errol Walton Barrow, National Hero delivered some of his very important addresses at
    that location. It is recorded that the late Marcus Garvey spoke to a mammoth crowd in the Steel Shed in 1937. The Steel Shed also housed the meetings of the Moyne Commission, the entity set up to evaluate the causes and effects of the social unrest in the British Caribbean during the 1930s. This building therefore became a critical cultural space in which Barbadians were able to give voice to their aspirations for their families and their nation.

    i) Barbados continues to contribute to the preservation of our intangible heritage. One of the ways in which this is done is by an annual contribution to the on-going work of the Caribbean Lexicography Programme of the University of the West Indies. This programme seeks to document and to provide details on the nation languages (dialects) of the region.
  • Droits de l'Homme
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    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 10
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 40
    Increased National Assistance Rates

    National Assistance in the form of cash transfers have been increased in several
    categories namely children, the able-bodied unemployed, Persons with Disabilities and
    the Severely Disabled over the last five years, the most recent being in the rate paid on
    behalf of children.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 40
    As part of the National Policy on Disabilities, the Ministry through the National Disabilities Unit is formulating an Action Plan which will expedite the implementation of policy pertaining to disability Issues. This will include the introduction of new legislation or the amendment of existing legislation.

    Ratification of the Convention of the Rights of Persons with Disabilities

    As part of the Action Plan, Barbados proposes to ratify the Convention on the Rights of
    Persons with Disabilities to which it became a signatory in 2007.
    As a means of providing a more efficient and effective personal social service delivery
    system, Barbados has sought to reposition the personal social services sector.
    Institutional frameworks have been strengthened to facilitate a more coordinated
    approach. Methodologies have been upgraded with the use of technology which permit's
    the formulation and implementation of evidenced-based policies. New programmes and
    initiatives have been introduced which have seen a shift from the idea of dependence on
    welfare to that of empowerment. Where necessary, cash transfers as well as assistance
    in-kind have been increased so that persons at risk can better cope with the prevailing
    economic crisis.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 85
    Domestic Laws

    The Ministry's legislative programme includes the development of the following pieces of legislation - An Employment Rights Bill, Anti-discrimination legislation and Sexual Harassment legislation. It is also planned to proclaim the Safety and Health at Work Act 2005.

    The Employments Rights Bill is at an advanced stage of preparation. It seeks to confer on persons, primarily employed persons, new employment rights. This Bill inter alia protects persons from unfair dismissal and the infringement of other employment rights. It ensures that employees are given full details of their employment particulars. An Employment Rights Tribunal will make determination on such matters.

    Drafting instructions have been prepared for anti-discrimination legislation. Through this legislation, no person shall unfairly discriminate against an employee or prospective employee in any employment policy or practice on the basis of race, place of origin, political opinion, colour, creed, sex, marital status, pregnancy, age, medical condition or disability. An important aspect of the proposal is the identified need to empower officers assigned to the Ministry of Labour's Project Unit whose mandate includes investigating and recording cases of discrimination against persons living with and affected by
    HIV/AIDS.

    Sexual Harassment legislation seeks to provide remedies in respect of acts of sexual harassment. The Employment Rights Bill will determine complaints made under the legislation with regard to sexual harassment and will make awards in accordance with the powers given under the legislation.

    The Ministry of Labour is currently addressing two (2) important matters before proclaiming the Safety and Health at Work Act 2005:
    - carrying out an audit of the workplaces in the public sector to determine the extent to which safety and health conditions conform to the Act;
    - obtaining consensus through discussion among the tripartite constituents with regard to Section 104 of the Act - the right to refuse dangerous work.
  • Éducation
    Paragraphes Relatifs au Thème
    • Rapports
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 38
    Poverty Reduction Empowerment Programme

    The Poverty Reduction Empowerment Programme represents an improvement of the existing Welfare to Work Programme. It is part of the overall empowerment programme offered in the treatment model to recipients of National Assistance and those persons at risk. Clients are offered skills training opportunities to equip themselves for the world of work. Personal development training is also part of the programme. It is based on the philosophy that persons can earn their way out of poverty.

    The scaled-up version of the programme will include job placements and work experience as well as psycho-social support. It will also be an integral part of the ISEE Bridge Programme.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 38
    Promotion of Continuous Training Programmes in Conjunction with Workers' Representatives and the Private Sector to enable Workers to respond to the Demands of the Labour Market.

    The Ministry of Labour through its Barbados Vocational Training Board continues to consult with employers in industry in the structuring of training programmes to facilitate the moulding of a graduate that can adequately respond to the demands of employers as they enter the labour market. In addition, the Board continues to promote apprenticeship training where training is delivered at the employers' workplace. Other areas of collaboration with both the private sector and workers' representatives include:
    - development of curricula;
    - establishment of technical committees;
    - membership on the Board of Directors of the Barbados Vocational Training Board.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 36
    Education

    The Government of Barbados continues to place considerable emphasis on human and social capital development through significant investments in education and related services. The Ministry of Education and Human Resource Development, in collaboration with educational institutions at all levels, strive to provide conducive learning environments to ensure the inculcation of appropriate knowledge, skills, and
    competencies among all learners. Major areas of focus are the expansion of Early Childhood Education, the integration of ICT in education, the enhancement of the quality of education at the primary and secondary levels and expansion of access to tertiary education.

    Social Development Priorities
    Expansion of Nursery Education

    The Ministry of Education and Human Resource Development continues to place a high priority on the provision of high quality pre-primary education for all children at the Early Childhood Education level. Currently, there are eight public nursery schools that cater to students in this age group. Four of these pre-primary schools were established in the ECE Expansion Project which was started in 2005. In addition, pre-primary education is offered in all public primary schools as well. While the Government of
    Barbados provides the general financing of this expansion programme, the MEHR has established a partnership with the Maria Holder Foundation to facilitate the financing of the construction and establishment of three new Nursery schools in 2011-2012 period.
    Primary School Textbook Scheme
    In keeping with the Government's pledge to introduce a Text Book Scheme for primary schools, the MEHR commenced the phased procurement and distribution of text books to all primary schools. The goal is to provide text books in the core subject areas of the national curriculum. To date, all public primary schools have been issued with text books to cover the curriculum in Language Arts and Mathematics. The process is ongoing with text books in the area of science being distributed in the current phase. However, the Ministry is aware that approximately 10% of the primary school population experience serious challenges in acquiring the requisite texts and workbooks which parents are required to purchase for their wards. To ensure that this vulnerable group is not disadvantaged in anyway, the Ministry has introduced a programme to cater to the needs of those most in need of assistance with the acquisition of workbooks. The Ministry has included in its 2011-2012 budget the sum of $500 000 to facilitate this programme. This policy was articulated by the Minister of Finance in the 2010 Budget Statement. The Ministry of Education and Human Resource Development, in collaboration with the public primary schools, will institute a mechanism to effectively identify and administer this new policy. It is also anticipated that the Inter-Ministry Task Force to monitor and strengthen the Social Safety net will provide another medium through which the Government will be able to provide short and long term assistance to these and other vulnerable groups.

    Alternative Education Day School

    The existing out-of school suspension facility at the Edna Nicholls Centre was established in 1998 to provide short-term intervention and remediation strategies for at-risk and deviant students. In recent years, there has emerged a growing trend of students who have developed very dysfunctional behaviours that significantly challenge regular schools and that require more long-term intervention and rehabilitation approaches. In some instances, there are students of compulsory school attendance age who are either
    expelled from school or by virtue of the deviant behaviours that they display cannot be retained in the regular school setting.

    Ministry of Education and Human Resource Development has embarked on an initiative to establish an Alternative Education Day School for "at-risk" students. The programme is intended for students between ages 10 and 16. This institution will offer an alternative curriculum which will be based on the national curriculum. The emphasis in the programme will be to teach students the types of skills they need to become productive members of society while engaging in meaningful life practices.

    The Ministry of Education and Human Resource Development is expecting to renovate the old Erdiston Primary School at a cost of approximately $1.8 million to establish this facility.

    Psychological Assistance programme

    The MEHR continues to provide psychological interventions for various categories of students. Three consultant psychologists and two psychiatrists have engaged by the Ministry of Education to provide services under the Psychological Assistance Programme.


    YDS/Sandy Lane/MEHR Primary School Counselling Programme

    The MEHR has also embarked on a tri-partite arrangement to provide counselling services to students in primary schools. Five counsellors have been provided through the public-private partnership programme which is currently available in 19 primary schools. Officers of the Ministry have monitored the provision of counselling services and worked collaboratively with the counsellors to manage the cases referred to them. Two hundred and forty three (243) students were seen by the counsellors in the period 2010-2011 for counselling purposes.
  • Emploi
    Paragraphes Relatifs au Thème
    • Rapports
    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 13
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 15
    Poverty Reduction Empowerment Programme

    The Poverty Reduction Empowerment Programme represents an improvement of the
    existing Welfare to Work Programme. It is part of the overall empowerment programme
    offered in the treatment model to recipients of National Assistance and those persons at
    risk. Clients are offered skills training opportunities to equip themselves for the world of
    work. Personal development training is also part of the programme. It is based on the
    philosophy that persons can earn their way out of poverty.

    The scaled-up version of the programme will include job placements and work
    experience as well as psycho-social support. It will also be an integral part of the ISEE
    Bridge Programme.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 15, 16
    Decent Work

    Government through its medium term economic strategy has implemented a number of measures aimed at improving employment prospects. These include:
    - investments in capital projects;
    - increased funding to entities like Fund Access to assist such institutions in providing technical assistance to small and micro enterprises;
    -maintaining employment levels within the public sector and using the mechanism of the Social Partnership to encourage the private sector to do likewise by adopting measures such as reduced work hours and implementing shift systems; and
    -pursuing additional double taxation treaties in the effort to further develop the international business and financial services sector.
    As the Ministry of Labour pursues its mandate of facilitating the provision of decent and
    productive work for Barbadians it will focus on a number of activities and programmes
    during the fiscal year 2011-2012. This will inter alia entail the following:
    • assisting in employment generation through the sourcing of job opportunities for Barbadians in both local and overseas markets;
    • formulating policies and implementing legislation with a view to promoting rights at work and enhancing other employment conditions, relations and opportunities; ensuring there is an adequate supply of well trained manpower in various branches of economic activity through improved delivery of training and expanded programmes;
    • enhancing the Barbados Labour Market Information System to deliver reliable, accurate and relevant information to key agents in the labour market;
    • continuing the development of the Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) Programme as the principal means of workforce development and mobility;
    • continuing to ensure the maintenance of a stable industrial relations climate by (i) enforcing and promoting labour, including workplace safety and health standards; and (ii) promoting good industrial relations practices throughout the public and private sectors;
    • promoting standards of appropriate behaviour in the workplace;
    • promoting a supportive, ethical and human rights environment in the workplace for people living with and affected by HIV / AIDS and other life threatening illnesses; and
    • implementing a decent work country programme with the support of the International Labour Organisation (ILO).
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 18
    The Government of Barbados strives to protect the rights of all women and children and seeks to eliminate all forms of discrimination and violence in accordance with the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) Inter-American Convention on the Prevention, Punishment and Eradication of Violence against Women "Convention of Belem do Para. Legislation has been passed in order to protect against incidences of Human Trafficking. A National Task Force on Human Trafficking currently exists but must be formalised. A Protocol on Human Trafficking to complement the legislation is being drafted.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 15
    Domestic Laws

    The Ministry's legislative programme includes the development of the following pieces of legislation - An Employment Rights Bill, Anti-discrimination legislation and Sexual Harassment legislation. It is also planned to proclaim the Safety and Health at Work Act 2005.

    The Employments Rights Bill is at an advanced stage of preparation. It seeks to confer on persons, primarily employed persons, new employment rights. This Bill inter alia protects persons from unfair dismissal and the infringement of other employment rights. It ensures that employees are given full details of their employment particulars.
    An Employment Rights Tribunal will make determination on such matters.

    Drafting instructions have been prepared for anti-discrimination legislation. Through this legislation, no person shall unfairly discriminate against an employee or prospective employee in any employment policy or practice on the basis of race, place of origin, political opinion, colour, creed, sex, marital status, pregnancy, age, medical condition or disability. An important aspect of the proposal is the identified need to empower officers assigned to the Ministry of Labour's Project Unit whose mandate includes investigating and recording cases of discrimination against persons living with and affected by
    HIV/AIDS.

    Sexual Harassment legislation seeks to provide remedies in respect of acts of sexual harassment. The Employment Rights Bill will determine complaints made under the legislation with regard to sexual harassment and will make awards in accordance with the powers given under the legislation.

    The Ministry of Labour is currently addressing two (2) important matters before proclaiming the Safety and Health at Work Act 2005:
    - carrying out an audit of the workplaces in the public sector to determine the extent to which safety and health conditions conform to the Act;
    - obtaining consensus through discussion among the tripartite constituents with regard to Section 104 of the Act - the right to refuse dangerous work.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 16
    Facilitating and promoting the movement of enterprises and workers from the informal to the formal sector, without adversely affecting the rights of workers

    This cross-cutting issue falls under the ambit of several Ministries. In Barbados, there is no large scale effort to carry out the activities described in the above caption. However, it should be noted that the National Insurance Department which is responsible for administering the social security scheme, continues to promote to small business and individuals, the need to be insured against a number of contingencies so that should they occur, the worker would enjoy some level of social protection in their time of need.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 15, 18
    Protection of all people particularly women and children from sexual and economic exploitation

    Barbados has ratified Convention No. 182 (the Worst Forms of Child Labour) and is committed to the precepts of that Convention. The Ministry of Labour has performed the important role of sensitizing its stakeholders and members of the public about the scourge of the worst forms of child labour through educational workshops, the print and electronic media.
    • Date:  2011-06-18    Paragraphes: 18
    The Government of Barbados strives to protect the rights of all women and children and seeks to eliminate all forms of discrimination and violence in accordance with the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) Inter-American Convention on the Prevention, Punishment and Eradication of Violence against Women "Convention of Belem do Para. Legislation has been passed in order to protect against incidences of Human Trafficking. A National Task Force on Human Trafficking currently exists but must be formalised. A Protocol on Human Trafficking to complement the legislation is being drafted.
  • Énergie
    Paragraphes Relatifs au Thème
    • Rapports
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 45
    PROMOTING ENERGY SECURITY

    The National policy of Barbados is geared towards greater energy sustain ability through
    the increase use of alternative energy and energy efficiency.

    This is being assisted through a reduction of import duties on renewable energy and energy efficiency products as well as income tax deductions for end users.

    A legislative review targeting these areas and plans to establish a finance mechanism for the private sector (Energy Smart Fund) are all part of a Sustainable Energy Framework being developed with assistance from the IADB.

    Global leadership has been established in the development of solar water heaters over the past 35 years, with over 40% of all buildings having installations. There are also several examples of solar water heart technology transfer to other countries such as Trinidad and St. Lucia.

    In addition to Solar Water Heaters other applications targeted include Solar Electricity, Wind, Biodiesel, Ethanol, Biomass cogeneration (sugar industry) and other forms of solar heating.

    The Barbados Government is offering leadership in this field by implementing a number of small solar and wind projects with support from the Global Environmental Facility (GEF) as well as developing structures and policies to encourage involvement in large scale projects by the private sector.

    The Government will continue to expand its local oil exploration that stands at approximately 1000 barrels/ day while making rights available to the private sector for the off-shore exploration through appropriate bid mechanisms.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 46, 47
    The National policy of Barbados is geared towards greater energy sustain ability through
    the increase use of alternative energy and energy efficiency.

    This is being assisted through a reduction of import duties on renewable energy and energy efficiency products as well as income tax deductions for end users.

    A legislative review targeting these areas and plans to establish a finance mechanism for the private sector (Energy Smart Fund) are all part of a Sustainable Energy Framework being developed with assistance from the IADB.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 50
    Global leadership has been established in the development of solar water heaters over the past 35 years, with over 40% of all buildings having installations. There are also several examples of solar water heart technology transfer to other countries such as Trinidad and St. Lucia.

    In addition to Solar Water Heaters other applications targeted include Solar Electricity, Wind, Biodiesel, Ethanol, Biomass cogeneration (sugar industry) and other forms of solar heating.

    The Barbados Government is offering leadership in this field by implementing a number of small solar and wind projects with support from the Global Environmental Facility (GEF) as well as developing structures and policies to encourage involvement in large scale projects by the private sector.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 51
    The Government will continue to expand its local oil exploration that stands at approximately 1000 barrels/ day while making rights available to the private sector for the off-shore exploration through appropriate bid mechanisms.
  • Enfance et jeunesse
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    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 16
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    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 39
    Increased National Assistance Rates

    National Assistance in the form of cash transfers have been increased in several
    categories namely children, the able-bodied unemployed, Persons with Disabilities and
    the Severely Disabled over the last five years, the most recent being in the rate paid on
    behalf of children.
  • Environnement
    Paragraphes Relatifs au Thème
    • Rapports
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 58
    Monitoring the impact of climate change

    Barbados is one of seven countries participating in the UNDP Global Environmental Facility (GEF)/WHO funded project captioned "Piloting Climate Adaptation to Protect Human Health". This project aims to identify, evaluate, promote and implement climate adaptation policies and strategies to minimise the impact on human health. Barbados has established a Climate Change Focal Point in the Ministry of Health to lead the project implementation.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 57
    The Governments of the Small Island Developing Sates (SIDS) recognise that the primary responsibility for the implementation of the Mauritius Strategy for the Further Implementation of the Programme of Action for the Sustainable Development of Small Island Developing States (MSI) lies with themselves and their national and local stakeholders.. Barbados' progress has to be characterised as fair given the prevailing conditions and ongoing global crises. There have been many successes but significant challenges still remain.

    Barbados has met and exceeded many of the targets set by the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Barbados still remains one of the few countries in the Western Hemisphere to develop and implement a national policy for sustainable development. The Barbados Sustainable Development Policy (BSDP) is our National Sustainable Development Strategy (NSDS), which provides a national framework, guidelines and
    principles that we can employ in our everyday activities. The policy promotes a motto of "Doing the right thing by doing things right".

    The Caribbean region has been categorised as a "Global Hot Spot". Climate change will have a profound impact on the region and creates significant implications for living and lifestyles. The Government of Barbados recognises that in order to fulfil the MDGs pertaining to the environment, certain global environmental sustainability challenges needed to be overcome. The Barbados Programme of Action (BPOA), the MSI and Agenda 21 provide the overarching framework and template for achieving environmental sustainability.

    Water Resource Management

    Barbados is the 15th most water scarce country with infrastructure that faces challenges. However, when in relation to domestic water producers in the western hemisphere, the efforts of the Barbados Water Authority (BWA) compares favourably. The water authority is pumping at near maximum capacity which puts ground water aquifers under significant pressure. The BWA is currently being restructured in order to keep pace with the challenges that lie ahead.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 58
    The Caribbean region has been categorised as a "Global Hot Spot". Climate change will have a profound impact on the region and creates significant implications for living and lifestyles. The Government of Barbados recognises that in order to fulfil the MDGs pertaining to the environment, certain global environmental sustainability challenges needed to be overcome. The Barbados Programme of Action (BPOA), the MSI and Agenda 21 provide the overarching framework and template for achieving environmental sustainability.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 65
    In respect of marine and coastal resources, Barbados has embraced the concept of island systems management, recognizing that the entire island is a coastal zone. In this context, integrated coastal zone management (ICZM) has been the framework implemented with great success for more than 25 years. Additionally, given that many climate change impacts being experienced by Barbados and other Caribbean SIDS are within or near the land/water interface, Government has further sought to ensure that internationally recognized tools for climate change adaptation are well integrated into its mature ICZM
    program. Emerging issues which Barbados is currently addressing relate to increased incidences of coastal hazards, both as a result of climate change, and increased seismic activity across the globe. Consequently, resources and expertise will be brought to bear on these hazards, further enhancing both social and economic resilience.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 63
    Pollution Management
    The Environmental Protection Department (EPD) has executed a number of projects and initiatives over the last two years which covered policy development, monitoring and evaluation. The activities ranged from the revision of the ambient air quality policy to the review of the Standard Operating Procedures for the Department. From amending the national oil spill contingency plan development of guidelines on fuel and waste oil handling, storage and disposal practices. The department also liaises with other government departments regarding the management of solid waste.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 64
    Parks, Protected Areas and Green Spaces
    Through the work of the Natural Heritage Department, Barbados is in the process of establishment of the National Park and a system of protected areas for the island. This will safeguard the biodiversity of the area including terrestrial ecosystems, habitats and species, create and support opportunities for sustainable local economic development through rural tourism and promote recreation and tourism within the Park which respects its special environmental qualities and where possible provides social and
    economic benefits for local communities.
  • Gestion des catastrophes
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    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 1
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    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 5
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 60
    Risk Mitigation and Early Warning Systems
    Barbados has been at the forefront of the charge for a tsunamis and coastal hazards warning system for the Caribbean and Adjacent Regions. In fact, Barbados is about to enter into a host agreement with the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO, to host the first ever Caribbean Tsunami Information Centre, servicing the four major languages of the region, as assisting countries in preparing their people who speak a variety of creoles and dialects. Government, through the Standing Committee on
    Coastal Hazards, has been developing its own monitoring and detection systems, conducting hazard assessments, and building a national notification system for hazard alerts. As Barbados is the current Chair of the regional warning system's intergovernmental group, other countries have also been receiving assistance in the development of their own early warning capabilities.
  • Groupe de travail mixte des Sommets
  • Infrastructures et des Transports
    Paragraphes Relatifs au Thème
    • Rapports
    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 5
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 7
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
  • Justice et État de droit
  • Migrations
    Paragraphes Relatifs au Thème
    • Rapports
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 17
    Migrants and their rights

    In 1967, Barbados ratified ILO Convention No. 97 (Migration for Employment). Regardless of their status, migrant workers are covered under the labour laws of Barbados and have access to the services of the Labour Department thereby receiving advice with respect to their terms and conditions of employment.
  • OEA
  • Personnes âgées
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    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 11
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 41
    White Paper on Ageing

    Barbados has an ageing population. At present Older Persons, those 65 years and over, comprise 13% of the population. As this trend continues, Barbados will be increasingly challenged to provide services for this special public. To this end a National Policy on Ageing is being formulated. As a Green Paper, the Policy was widely circulated and feedback sought. It is now at the stage of a White Paper and is being finalised to be laid in Parliament.

    The White Paper will guide all policy initiatives pertaining to Older Persons including Social Protection, Social and Economic Security, Supportive Physical Environments, Older Persons Rights, including Protective Legislation and Health Care. The Paper is also recommending the establishment of an Agency to focus exclusively on Elder Affairs.
  • Peuples autochtones
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    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 6, 11
    Gender Equality

    The Government of Barbados is in the process developing a National Policy on Gender and is committed to the development of all women. In the political arena, there is a level playing field for women and men to enter and actively participate. The Government has discerned that women are generally more reluctant to enter this field which is normally predominantly male, but has sought to encourage women to find their niche in politics. The Bureau of Gender Affairs in conjunction with the Caribbean Policy Development
    Centre have embarked on a number of training initiatives designed to empower women
    to take up the political mantle

    A Barbadian female politician, Senator Irene Sandiford-Garner, currently sits as one of
    the three Vice-Presidents of the Commission on Women (CIM) and serves as a positive
    model for the women of the country.

    The Government of Barbados strives to protect the rights of all women and children and seeks to eliminate all forms of discrimination and violence in accordance with the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) Inter-American Convention on the Prevention, Punishment and Eradication of Violence against Women "Convention of Belem do Para. Legislation has been passed in order to protect against incidences of Human Trafficking. A National Task Force on Human Trafficking currently exists but must be formalised. A Protocol on Human Trafficking to complement the legislation is being drafted.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 6
    Protection of all people particularly women and children from sexual and economic exploitation

    Barbados has ratified Convention No. 182 (the Worst Forms of Child Labour) and is committed to the precepts of that Convention. The Ministry of Labour has performed the important role of sensitizing its stakeholders and members of the public about the scourge of the worst forms of child labour through educational workshops, the print and electronic media.
  • Santé
    Ministérielles
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    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 15
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    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 35
    Other Programmes and Policy Initiatives
    HIV/AIDS and Persons with Disabilities

    Barbados continues to pursue an expanded response in the fight against HIV / AIDS. The
    Ministry responsible for HIV / AIDS and its Agencies have been active both in the area of
    prevention and care and support. In recent times, however, increased attention has been
    paid to Persons with Disabilities who because of their disability are often excluded from
    the messages coming out of the HIV / AIDS Programmes, especially those who are
    intellectually challenged.

    To this end, the Ministry through its HIV/AIDS Coordinator, the National Disabilities
    Unit and the Ministry of Education, Special Education Unit has been working to develop
    material to aid the communication process on behalf of such persons. To date a number
    of posters have been produced and work continues on the production of a Manual for
    teachers and parents.

    For those who are visually impaired, existing literature is being translated into Braille.
    Audio books are also being considered for both the hearing impaired and those who may
    not be able to read.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 33
    Barbados has already approached the FAO for assistance with preparing its own National. FNS Policy and Plan which will be coordinated by the MAFFI in collaboration with the National Nutrition Centre of the Ministry of Health. This Policy will be multi-sectoral in nature and will therefore involve national consultations with the various government departments, stakeholders in the farming communities, NGOs, and other private sector organizations.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 26, 31
    Access to comprehensive health care

    Barbados' policies on health are predicated on the philosophy that health care is a
    fundamental right of Barbadians. Consequently, Barbadian citizens and permanent
    residents are guaranteed universal access to health services, including formulary drugs,
    in the public sector, without requirement for co-payment or user fees.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 28
    Barbados recognises the importance of implementing the Global Strategy on the
    Prevention and Control of Non-communicable Diseases (NCDs) and has committed to
    executing the components of the CARlCOM Regional Plan of Action on Noncommunicable
    Diseases which was an outcome of the Declaration of the Heads of State and Governments of the Caribbean Community (CARl COM), Uniting to Stop the Epidemic of Chronic Non- Communicable Diseases, 2007.

    In 2007, Barbados established a high-level National Chronic Diseases Commission to plan, guide, monitor and evaluate the national policy on NCDs. The Commission has developed a five-year plan for the prevention and control of non-communicable diseases. Consultations were held with stakeholders in the private and public health care sectors to chart the way forward in adopting the Chronic Care Model in the management of non-communicable diseases.

    Initiatives to improve the surveillance of NCDs and their risk factors have commenced with the establishment of the Barbados National Registry for Chronic Diseases in 2008 (the first of its kind in the Caribbean); the mapping of risk factors and disease prevalence with the implementation of a STEPS survey (2007); and participation in the development of a minimum data-set of indicators to monitor chronic diseases and their risk factors across the Caribbean region (CAREC, 2009). It is envisaged that these initiatives will be supported and strengthened by the development and implementation of the regional surveillance system for non-communicable disease, which will be financed by the Inter-American Development Bank.

    Barbados is committed to reducing the levels of the modifiable risk factors for tobacco use, unhealthy diet and physical inactivity. The Government of Barbados ratified the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) in 2005 and in 2010, enacted legislation to ban the sale of tobacco products by and to minors, and to prohibit smoking in public places. In addition, Barbados is pursuing an initiative in conjunction with other Caribbean countries to regulate and standardise the packaging and labelling of cigarettes in keeping with the FCTC.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 29
    Barbados recognises the importance of implementing the Global Strategy on the
    Prevention and Control of Non-communicable Diseases (NCDs) and has committed to
    executing the components of the CARlCOM Regional Plan of Action on Noncommunicable
    Diseases which was an outcome of the Declaration of the Heads of State
    and Governments of the Caribbean Community (CARl COM), Uniting to Stop the Epidemic of Chronic Non- Communicable Diseases, 2007.

    In 2007, Barbados established a high-level National Chronic Diseases Commission to
    plan, guide, monitor and evaluate the national policy on NCDs. The Commission has
    developed a five-year plan for the prevention and control of non-communicable diseases.
    Consultations were held with stakeholders in the private and public health care sectors
    to chart the way forward in adopting the Chronic Care Model in the management of non-communicable diseases.

    Initiatives to improve the surveillance of NCDs and their risk factors have commenced
    with the establishment of the Barbados National Registry for Chronic Diseases in 2008
    (the first of its kind in the Caribbean); the mapping of risk factors and disease prevalence
    with the implementation of a STEPS survey (2007); and participation in the development of a minimum data-set of indicators to monitor chronic diseases and their risk factors across the Caribbean region (CAREC, 2009). It is envisaged that these initiatives will be supported and strengthened by the development and implementation of the regional surveillance system for non-communicable disease, which will be financed by the Inter-American Development Bank.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 32
    Measures are being taken to improve diet through the development and promulgation of National Food-based Dietary Guidelines (2009), including guidelines for reducing salt and sugar in foods fed to children in schools ("Nutritious and Healthy Foods in Schools: nutritional and Practical Guidelines for Barbados") and other educational institutions, as well as the launching of an initiative to chronicle levels and sources of dietary sodium. The National Chronic Diseases Commission in January 2011 convened a consultation
    with local food producers and manufacturers to sensitise them to the initiative to reduce dietary salt intake, and to prepare a plan of action for the lowering of salt levels in locally manufactured foods.

    A National Task Force on Physical Activity was established in 2008 to engage all strata of the society and all ages in increasing physical activity and to develop national guidelines on physical activity for healthy living.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 33
    Measures are being taken to improve diet through the development and promulgation of National Food-based Dietary Guidelines (2009), including guidelines for reducing salt and sugar in foods fed to children in schools ("Nutritious and Healthy Foods in Schools: nutritional and Practical Guidelines for Barbados") and other educational institutions, as well as the launching of an initiative to chronicle levels and sources of dietary sodium. The National Chronic Diseases Commission in January 2011 convened a consultation
    with local food producers and manufacturers to sensitise them to the initiative to reduce dietary salt intake, and to prepare a plan of action for the lowering of salt levels in locally manufactured foods.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 26
    Barbados remains committed to the implementation of the International Health Regulations. In 2011, the Ministry of Health established a committee to review local legislation and to recommend changes consistent with Barbados' commitments under the International Health Regulations, as well as to review and develop protocols and standard operating procedures at the ports of entry.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 34
    Having developed a National Influenza Pandemic Preparedness Plan since 2006, Barbados has been revising and strengthening its national influenza surveillance capacity to prevent, detect and diagnose influenza virus infection. Particular attention has been paid to the integration of the virological and epidemiological components of the system and laboratory capacity was enhanced through training provided by the Caribbean Epidemiological Centre (CAREC).

    As part of its pandemic preparedness, Barbados provides influenza vaccines to health care workers and to vulnerable population groups.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 35
    Halting and reversing the spread of HIV/AIDS

    Barbados is currently implementing the second Government of Barbados/World Bank HIV/AIDS Project, which inter alia, focuses on improving access to most-at-risk populations (MARPS) and key vulnerable population groups. This Project seeks to deliver a package of services that meet the criteria for accessibility, acceptance, coverage, intensity, linkages and quality of data. The project also seeks to improve the use of all available media especially new media and social networking to effectively administer
    behaviour change communication; to undertake research through which evidence-based interventions can be implemented; and to implement efficient and effective monitoring & evaluation mechanisms. Currently, the National HIV / AIDS Commission is conducting a behaviour change communication campaign that targets the elimination of stigma and discrimination against people living with HIV.

    Antiretroviral therapy remains available and accessible to all persons meeting the
    criteria for treatment.

    Barbados remains committed to the reduction of the incidence of mother-to-child transmission of HIV to less than 5% by 2015 as well as maintaining the current transmission rate of less than 1%. The coverage data on the prevention of mother to child transmission (PMTCT) was determined in accordance with UNGASS indicator Number 5, which assesses the percentage of HIV infected pregnant women who received anti-retroviral therapy to reduce the risk of mother-to-child transmission. The PMTCT coverage was 91.4% in 2008, 82.1% in 2009 and 88.5% in 2010.

    Barbados is scaling up its PMTCT programme to improve maternal and child survival by achieving universal access to comprehensive PMTCT services. The following are the key components of this programme:

    1. Review and update the guidelines on treatment for the prevention of mother-to-child transmission to strengthen the treatment programme for HIV positive mothers;
    2. Develop and implement a national training curriculum for PMTCT; and
    3. Monitor the implementation of the national PMTCT Policy across the health sector of Barbados.
  • Sécurité
    Ministérielles
    Paragraphes Relatifs au Thème
    • Rapports
    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 2
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 3
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 5
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 6
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 7
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 9
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 72
    STRENGTHENING PUBLIC SECURITY
    The Royal Barbados Police Force (RBPF) continues, at the strategic level, to formulate and implement policies consistent with Supply and Demand Reduction and Harm Reduction with respect to illicit drugs. The Force has strengthened its information sharing capability in the region and internationally through specific systems, training and education. By virtue of this our capability to monitor and interdict drug trafficking has been greatly enhanced.
    Our Harm Reduction focus has been targeted at public education, alerting the community to the dangers and ramifications of the use and abuse of illicit drugs.
    Specifically, the RBPF has expanded its Drug Awareness Programme in Primary Schools, through the Drug Awareness Resistance Education Programme or (DARE). It is contemplated that this programme will be extended to our Secondary Schools.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 70
    STRENGTHENING PUBLIC SECURITY
    The Royal Barbados Police Force (RBPF) continues, at the strategic level, to formulate and implement policies consistent with Supply and Demand Reduction and Harm Reduction with respect to illicit drugs. The Force has strengthened its information sharing capability in the region and internationally through specific systems, training and education. By virtue of this our capability to monitor and interdict drug trafficking has been greatly enhanced.
    Our Harm Reduction focus has been targeted at public education, alerting the community to the dangers and ramifications of the use and abuse of illicit drugs. Specifically, the RBPF has expanded its Drug Awareness Programme in Primary Schools, through the Drug Awareness Resistance Education Programme or (DARE). It is contemplated that this programme will be extended to our Secondary Schools.
    Transnational Organized Crime
    The RBPF has developed a capability in its Financial Crimes Investigative Unit to investigate and submit for prosecution, crimes of Money Laundering. Current Legislation has been given a recent and welcomed boost to the Forces capability through the promulgation of the Transnational Organised Crime (Prevention and Control) Act 2011-3. Complementing this, the Force has deployed more investigators to the unit responsible for such investigations.
    The RBPF's Contingency Plans for terrorist incidents are subject to continuous update. Related training and simulations complement the updates. Continuous networking with international agencies in the fight, against terrorism heightens the Force's awareness of any possible terrorist threats.
    Since 1982, the Force embarked on Community Policing as a crime prevention strategy and philosophy. Currently new crime prevention strategy and philosophy treat to pervasive public engagement through Community Policing and Problem Solving; the desirable integrated approach. This approach has led to the better management of Crime Prevention and has had the distinct utility of identifying criminal gangs and
    associated criminal behaviour.
    Firearm crime poses a threat to individual and community well-being. This criminal activity can drive fear throughout our communities hence the Force accords it the seriousness with which it should be treated. There is a specialized unit to deal with the more organized and sophisticated aspect of firearm crime and the movement and use of ammunition. At the strategic level, the Force uses its international connections to
    monitor illicit manufacture and trafficking in firearms and ammunition. Recently the RBPF has been calling for and now has the capability of tracing the origins of firearms and ammunition used illegally.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 76
    Transnational Organized Crime
    The RBPF has developed a capability in its Financial Crimes Investigative Unit to investigate and submit for prosecution, crimes of Money Laundering. Current Legislation has been given a recent and welcomed boost to the Forces capability through the promulgation of the Transnational Organised Crime (Prevention and Control) Act 2011-3. Complementing this, the Force has deployed more investigators to the unit responsible for such investigations.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 69
    The RBPF's Contingency Plans for terrorist incidents are subject to continuous update. Related training and simulations complement the updates. Continuous networking with international agencies in the fight, against terrorism heightens the Force's awareness of any possible terrorist threats.
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 75
    Firearm crime poses a threat to individual and community well-being. This criminal activity can drive fear throughout our communities hence the Force accords it the seriousness with which it should be treated. There is a specialized unit to deal with the more organized and sophisticated aspect of firearm crime and the movement and use of ammunition. At the strategic level, the Force uses its international connections to
    monitor illicit manufacture and trafficking in firearms and ammunition. Recently the RBPF has been calling for and now has the capability of tracing the origins of firearms and ammunition used illegally.
  • Société civile
  • Suivi des Sommets
  • Technologie
    Paragraphes Relatifs au Thème
    • Rapports
    • Date:  2015-12-18    Paragraphes: 3
    Information disponible en espagnol anglais
    • Date:  2011-06-21    Paragraphes: 43
    Information Management and Research

    A barrier to efficient and effective delivery of social services has been the inability to
    retrieve existing data to inform policy and enhance the social service delivery system. To
    this end, the setting up of a National Social Care Information Management System is
    being pursued and a Website activated. A Country Assessment of Living Conditions has
    also been conducted.

    National Social Care Information Management System (NASCIMS)

    Acknowledging that the global environment has evolved as a knowledge-based society,
    development policy and strategies are becoming increasingly dependent on the flow of
    intelligent up-to-date information. Given the nature, scope of work and potential impact
    on national development, the mandate of the Ministry of Social Care, Constituency
    Empowerment and Community Development - with six (6) critical departments and a
    staff complement of approximately four hundred (400) persons, there was an urgent
    need of a technologically advanced, network. The process of setting up this network has
    begun. When completed, it will efficiently and effectively share vital information for the
    conducting of the work of the Ministry.

    The establishment of NASCIMS will allow for service excellence to clients and the
    general public. It will also provide for up-to-date information on the status of social
    development in Barbados and inform policy-making and development strategies, It is
    anticipated that there will be the connectivity of all departments.; the expedition of
    information sharing; accurate departmental statistics; the efficient transmission of
    information; remote access of files and resources; and the centralization of information
    and data on shared servers where it is managed for confidentiality and security.
    NASCIMS will also greatly assist with client tracking.

    To facilitate this initiative, all Departments under the Ministry are being computerised.
    It is hoped that eventually all Agencies will be linked to allow for information sharing,
    case conferences, etc.