Issues Affecting Caribbean Society

Learn about Issues Affecting Caribbean Society

Author:Author ImageKrish Beachoo

Edu Level: NCSE

Date: Aug 9, 2021

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Drugs and crime

Rewording:

Drugs encompass medications and substances that can have severe impacts on the body. Legally obtained drugs are prescribed by medical professionals, while illegal drugs include marijuana, heroin, cocaine, LSD, and ecstasy. Substance abuse leads to short- and long-term health issues, financial and occupational setbacks, fractured families, and underperformance in various aspects of life, such as work, school, and the community. Crime poses a significant problem in most societies, ranging from minor offenses like vandalism and theft to major crimes like murder, gang violence, armed robbery, and rape. Gangs often have associations with drugs and crime in the Caribbean region.

Proposed Plan of Action:

To prevent drug abuse, the following strategies can be implemented:

  • Educating individuals about the consequences of substance abuse
  • Offering parental guidance to help children avoid drug abuse
  • Providing counseling services for those directly or indirectly affected by drug abuse.

To combat crime, the following strategies can be employed:

  • Ensuring fair punishment for crimes
  • Implementing crime prevention programs such as community policing, school presentations, and anti-crime campaigns
  • Conducting awareness campaigns to highlight the effects of crime on individuals and society.

HIV and AIDS:

HIV is a virus that causes AIDS, a disease for which there is currently no cure. However, the effects of the disease can be managed through treatment. HIV/AIDS can be transmitted through various means, including unprotected sex, untested blood transfusions, sharing razors and syringes, and contact with infected blood or other body fluids. Additionally, mothers with HIV or AIDS can pass the infection to their babies. Poverty, gender inequality, sex tourism, and stigma are factors associated with HIV/AIDS. AIDS poses a significant threat to a country's development, as affected individuals may face limitations in work capacity and require expensive medical treatment to maintain a productive life. Furthermore, the death of parents due to AIDS leaves behind orphaned children who need care.

Proposed Plan of Action:

To help prevent HIV/AIDS, the following strategies can be implemented:

  • Encouraging abstinence from sexual activity
  • Promoting the use of protection during sexual activity to reduce the risk of infection
  • Promoting faithfulness to one partner
  • Encouraging regular testing for infection
  • Discouraging contact with other people's blood and dirty syringes
  • Government campaigns that provide information and advice on prevention
  • Conducting prevention campaigns in schools.

Although AIDS is no longer considered a death sentence, ongoing treatment can be financially burdensome for governments. Moreover, the economic cost to the state can increase due to lost workdays and social expenses, such as supporting AIDS orphans.

Unemployment:

Approximately 10 million young people in Latin America and the Caribbean are estimated to be unemployed, with many of them having dropped out of school. The rate of unemployment varies across countries. Common reasons for unemployment in the region include economic decline, lack of practical experience and skills among young individuals compared to older workers, preference for firing younger workers during staff reductions, government spending cuts, and the loss of markets and industries. Youth unemployment has various consequences, including involvement in illegal activities for financial gain, hindrance to the country's acquisition of new ideas and skills, and disillusionment and unhappiness among young people.

Proposed Plan of Action:

To address unemployment, the following actions can be taken:

  • Governments in the Caribbean can prioritize teaching young people skills to enhance their employability.
  • Efforts can be made to assist young people in starting their own businesses and becoming self-employed.
  • Young individuals can gain experience through volunteer work, government-sponsored work schemes, or courses that offer practical work opportunities.

Poverty:

Poverty refers to the state

of being economically disadvantaged and lacking sufficient resources to lead a comfortable life. In the Caribbean, poverty is caused by factors such as unemployment, low income levels, regional and global income inequality, limited access to education, volatile economies, the absence of government-funded social care programs for impoverished families, limited income opportunities due to education or skills training, gender inequality, and exclusion from certain societal sectors. Poverty is often intertwined with crime and violence; however, some families living in poverty manage to remain strong, happy, and steer clear of criminal activities. Researchers have identified three main types of poverty in the Caribbean: intergenerational poverty, poverty resulting from job loss during economic downturns, and seasonal poverty where families depend on work during specific events like Carnival.

Proposed Plan of Action:

Strategies to combat poverty include:

  • Promoting economic growth to increase employment and income levels
  • Encouraging higher levels of investment and improved productivity
  • Enhancing education and training opportunities
  • Improving social services to support less privileged families
  • Facilitating trade opportunities for economically disadvantaged countries with wealthier nations
  • Encouraging foreign investment.

Street Children:

Street children are deprived of homes, affection, protection, food, and education. They suffer from poor health and face constant threats of violence. Some resort to begging for money, while others become involved in gangs.

Causes for street children include poverty, abuse or violence, and abandonment.

Proposed Plan of Action:

To address the issue of street children, the following actions can be taken:

  • Increasing the number of foster parents and adoption programs
  • Establishing day centers that provide food and healthcare
  • Offering counseling services to address trauma
  • Providing facilities to teach vocational skills that can lead to employment
  • Establishing specialized educational facilities
  • Providing childcare services for the children of street children.

Human Trafficking:

Human trafficking involves forcibly, coercively, or fraudulently moving individuals away from their usual place of residence to another location. It commonly occurs in the form of transporting children and women for forced labor or sexual exploitation. The Caribbean region serves as a source, transit, and destination for trafficked individuals.

Proposed Plan of Action:

To combat human trafficking, the following measures can be implemented:

  • Ensuring the protection of victims who act as witnesses and helping them retain their documentation
  • Ensuring fair treatment by immigration authorities
  • Prosecuting both traffickers and clients involved in trafficking
  • Providing counseling services to victims of trafficking
  • Establishing support services such as shelters, educational and vocational training, financial assistance, and job placement to aid in victim reintegration.


Josiah Renne (PC)

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