Caribbean Youth
Development: Issues and Policy Options
by Wendy Cunningham and Maria Correia
A World Bank country study.
Washington DC. USA, may, 2003.
CONTENTS
Foreword
Preface
Acronyms
Executive Summary
1. Introduction
2.
Framework for Analyzing Caribbean Youth
3. Negative Behaviors and Outcomes Observed among Caribbean Youth
4. Sources of Positive and Negative Youth Outcomes
5. The Costs of Risky Adolescent Behavior
6. Youth Development Policies and Programs
7. Conclusions and Recommendations
Appendix 1 Methodological Description for Chapter 4
Appendix 2 Lifetime Earnings Figures
Appendix 3 Methodology for Cost Calculations, Chapter
5
Appendix 4 Caribbean Youth Policies and Programs
Bibliography
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Foreword
Young people are the custodians of our society and the
trustees of prosperity for future generations. Nowhere is this more
apparent than the Caribbean region, where two-thirds of the population
is under the age of 30. This youthful profile of the Caribbean
nations presents both opportunities and challenges in the years ahead
as the important role that young people play in national and regional
development becomes increasingly apparent.
Experience has taught us that young people can play an
important role in national development if provided the right tools,
the learning and empowerment to employ those tools and a supportive
environment in which to use them. Young people can and should lead the
way in economic growth and poverty reduction. By the same token, however,
that same energy and vitality, if left unharnessed or if marginalized
can have a dramatic negative effect on social and economic stability.
This study, undertaken at the request of our clients,
could not be more timely or relevant for our work in the Caribbean Region,
where we have witnessed a worrying upward trend in youthassociated issues
of drug trafficking, HIV/AIDs infection, adolescent pregnancies, and
other risky behavior. Set against a backdrop of regional and international
instability, the urgency of grappling with this vital component of society
has pushed the Bank to explore innovative measures to address and include
youth as an integral part of our work.
The study is the first work of its kind to present quantitative
evidence that investing in youth is an economically sound approach for
Governments to take. The authors recognize, however, that the area of
youth and development is an often complex and uncomfortable one to address,
as many of the possible solutions entail behavioral changes that challenge
long-established and accepted norms. This study will, we hope, encourage
and stimulate the dialogue on youth in the region and assist those working
in this critical areaGovernments, Youth Organizations, NGOs, the
donor community and young people themselvesin framing workplans
for breaking the cycle of intergenerational poverty.
Orsalia
Kalantzopoulos
Director, Caribbean Country Management Unit
Latin America and the Caribbean Region
For more information: http://wbln0018.worldbank.org/