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CARIBBEAN AFFAIRS Jamaican to receive CARICOM triennial award for women
An outstanding
Jamaican woman, Barbara Bailey, will be awarded the
Caribbean Community’s Triennial Award for Women
for her sterling contribution to national and regional
development, especially in the field of education and
research.
The award was conferred on July 1, 2008 at the Opening
Ceremony of the Twenty-Ninth Meeting of the Conference of
CARICOM Heads of Government, in Antigua and Barbuda.
She has for many years been at the forefront of advocacy
for gender equality and equity through her teaching and
research activities. She will be the second Jamaican to
receive this prestigious Award and will be joining the ranks
of eight other outstanding women who have received the Award
since its inception in 1983.
In 1983, during a meeting of Ministers of Women's Affairs
to commemorate CARICOM’s Tenth Anniversary, it was
recognized that the 1973 Treaty of Chaguaramas addressed the
need to examine the position of women in the Region.
Evolving out of the deliberations was the recommendation to
confer an award to an outstanding CARICOM woman whose work
had made a significant contribution to the socio-economic
development of the Caribbean.
The first Award was made in 1984 to Nesta Patrick,
national of Trinidad and Tobago. Since then, seven others
have received the Award for their dedication and
determination in broadening the parameters of existence for
women and improving their economic, social, political,
cultural and legal status.
They are The late Dame Nita Barrow, national of Barbados
in 1987; Dr Peggy Antrobus, national of Grenada and citizen
of St Vincent and the Grenadines, 1990; Magda Pollard,
national of Guyana, 1993; Dr Lucille Mair, national of
Jamaica, 1996; Professor Joycelin Massiah, national of
Guyana and citizen of Barbados, 1999; Professor Rhoda
Reddock, national of Trinidad and Tobago, 2002; and Justice
Desiree Bernard, national of Guyana in 2005.
(Caribbean Net News)
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