"Caribbean Community" Essays and Research Papers

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    1 Examine three measures that Caribbean countries can implement to minimize the danger posed to coral reefs in the region. CAPE 2009 Ql: Coral reefs inhabit many coastal regions around Caribbean islands. These reefs are at once magnificently beautiful yet very fragile and sensitive to even the slightest variation in the waters around it. Coral reefs perform a vital socio- economic and socio-cultural function in the Caribbean. Apart from it being important to human society for its aesthetic appeal

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    409001306 Impact of American media on Caribbean media culture and music Rap‚ Hip Hop‚ Pop‚ Fashion; all these are areas in which the culture of North America has influenced the culture in the Caribbean. To be able to determine the full extent to which American culture affects the Caribbean‚ we must first define what Caribbean culture is. In its broadest definition it is the actions and way of life practiced by the people who live amongst the islands of the Caribbean Sea that stretch from the Bahamas

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    Caribbean Immigrants to New York/Us In the early 1900s the largest number of black immigrants were English-speaking Caribbean (West Indians) who settled in the Northeast‚ mainly in New York City. These immigrants were only 1.3 percent of the NYC population and faced intense racism‚ but by 1923 they became a 12.7 percent of the city’s population. Many of these immigrants were young‚ unmarried men. According to Winston James‚ a few women arrived and held occupations as teachers‚ doctors‚ lawyers

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    Dominican Republic and Jamaica‚ sisters of the Caribbean The Caribbean is a mixture of different cultures and people. Jamaica is under the island of Cuba and on the west side of Haiti. The Dominican Republic shares it land with Haiti on the west and Puerto Rico is on the east‚ crossing the ´´canal de la mona´´. These islands may look similar in a geographical view but they have some peculiarities. Aspects like their languages and the political situation where they are living make them unique. Since

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    also the airline‚ taxi‚ restaurant and hotel industries Sex tourism is led by Barbados‚ and Jamaica in the Caribbean. World Tourism Organization: Prevention of Organized Sex Tourism.  Human Rights organizations warn that sex tourism contributes to human trafficking and child prostitution.(Local Caribbean twang) White man love the Caribbean woman. So why not take the Caribbean woman to him. 40% of Prostitutes are children: due to poverty.what kind of life What if it was you. The

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    Critically analyze the social and psychological development of Caribbean people in the last three decades. Many factors have impacted the social and psychological development of Caribbean people during the last thirty years. These include but are not limited to the history of the Caribbean‚ education‚ religion‚ sports‚ music‚ information communication technology‚ economic conditions and regional integration. Social development refers the ways in which individuals’ social interactions and expectations

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    respond to the novelty of life in the tropics/ to the novelty of large-scale sugar production? And to the novelty of slave labor?” Summary: Dunn’s book chronicles the settling and early growth of the first 3 generations of British colonists in the Caribbean islands. From a modest attempt to grow North American staples tobacco and cotton‚ largely with white indentures and their own labor‚ the islands quickly turned‚ with Dutch assistance‚ into great sugar plantations with large numbers of African slave

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    Duty to promote community cohesion: draft guidance for schools Purpose of this document This document seeks the views of schools on the content of guidance on the implementation of the new duty to promote community cohesion under the Education and Inspections Act 2006. The final version of the guidance will be published in July 2007 and will be informed by the responses received to this consultation and examples of existing good practice in promoting community cohesion. 1. Introduction

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    Kazi 1 Youth Unemployment in the Caribbean: Social and Economic Backgrounds : Kazi‚ Tamjidul Huda Kazi Table of Contents Acronyms Terms of Reference Introduction School-to-Work Transition Some Impediments to Labour Force Entry The Caribbean Context Defining Youth Youth Unemployment Rates Specific Social Problems in the Caribbean Youth Development Policies and Programs in the Caribbean Regional Programs International Development Organizations Global Policy Framework Effectiveness of Youth

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    thus did not need to import as many slaves. Others‚ such as in the Caribbean‚ had to continually import new slaves as the death rate always exceeded the birth rate. Culture: There was not a sense of unity throughout Africa‚ therefore various African groups captured their enemies and sold them into slavery. Slaves formed bands with drums and tambourines‚ in an attempt to retain their cultural traditions‚

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