Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Political parties should discuss women issues during campaign

Grow Safeguard Preserve Create A MultiMedia Legacy

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Political parties should discuss women issues during campaign

Welcome to the Third World Summit on the Arts and Culture

Welcome to the Third World Summit on the Arts and Culture

PEARL EINTOU SPRINGER - biography

PEARL EINTOU SPRINGER - biography

Development newsletters - [E-civicus] e-CIVICUS 415 HTML

Development newsletters - [E-civicus] e-CIVICUS 415 HTML

Peepal Tree Press - Wh'appen?

Peepal Tree Press - Wh'appen?

INDIAN BOOK PUBLISHING IN THE CARIBBEAN

INDIAN BOOK PUBLISHING IN THE CARIBBEAN

The Trinidad Guardian -Online Edition Ver 2.0

The Trinidad Guardian -Online Edition Ver 2.0

Caribbean Beat: Archive (1992-2006)

Caribbean Beat: Archive (1992-2006)

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limers : Message: CULTURE CHEST Newsletter 2005 WNTR Issue 3 Ed 1

limers : Message: CULTURE CHEST Newsletter 2005 WNTR Issue 3 Ed 1

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Trinidad Times - Trinidad News

Trinidad Times - Trinidad News

Jamaica Gleaner News - Kamla Persad-Bissesar on a roll in 2010 - Business - Wednesday | May 26, 2010

Jamaica Gleaner News - Kamla Persad-Bissesar on a roll in 2010 - Business - Wednesday | May 26, 2010

Writers

Writers

Merlene Lawrence


Grow Safeguard Preserve Create A MultiMedia Legacy

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Merlene Lawrence

News Article


Grow Safeguard Preserve Create A MultiMedia Legacy

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News Article

DIVALI NAGAR GREETINGS FROM THE HON. KAMLA PERSAD-BISSESSAR, PRIME MINISTER OF TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO

DIVALI NAGAR GREETINGS FROM THE HON. KAMLA PERSAD-BISSESSAR, PRIME MINISTER OF TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO

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NGO head: T&T not entitled to host ‘Summit’

Grow Safeguard Preserve Create A MultiMedia Legacy

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NGO head: T&T not entitled to host ‘Summit’ | The Trinidad Guardian

Agriculture to join ‘sexy’ media beats | The Trinidad Guardian

Agriculture to join ‘sexy’ media beats | The Trinidad Guardian

Bringing sexy back to farming An exemplary Agri Outreach Initiative from Dr Kris



The Guardian Editorial was impressed by this outreach initiative I devised for the Caribbean Agricultural Research and Development Institute (CARDI) and its partners InterAmerican Institute for Cooperation in Agriculture and EU-ACP Centre for Technical Cooperation in Agriculture. 
The slogan became a catchword across the  agriculture and food security spectrum and the drive for sustainable development. It was accompanied by progressive blogging deemed innovative as  Development Policy Blogging for New Media.  Enjoy the Flashback . For new developments stay tuned to GloCaL Knowledge Pot at www.krisrampersad.com and Social Media Channels: @KrisRampersad Youtube, Instagram, Linked In & Pinterest  
See more on Agriculture at: https://krisrampersad.com/?s=agriculture


Bringing sexy back to farming | The Trinidad Guardian

Bringing sexy back to farming

Today's Editorial (Trinidad Guardian)

?Last week, Minister of Legal Affairs Peter Taylor declared the battle on food prices won. While customers at supermarkets all over T&T raised their heads from examining price stickers in surprise at this new revelation from governmental surveys and analysis, it remains clear that the war continues. While the yardstick used by the minister may have been the sharp decline in food inflation reported by the Central Bank late last month, T&T remains behind on a more critical measure–that of fulfilling its capacity for locally produced food. As the language on agricultural development evolves, the newest word to be employed in the lexicon of local farming is "sexy." The description was invoked by visiting Vincentian agriculturist Jethro Greene in an interview with the Business Guardian.

"There has been a lot of focus on oil, energy and tourism.

This is an exciting time for agriculture. Agriculture is big business. We need to make it spicy and sexy," said the local foods evangelist. Announcing a new award for agriculture focused-journalism offered by the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture and the Caribbean Agricultural Research Institute, former Sunday Guardian editor Dr Kris Rampersad noted that it was hoped that the competition would "help us understand that agriculture is as sexy as other beats." The Prime Minister didn't invoke the "s" word when he spoke to entrepreneurs at the Prime Minister's Export Awards in September, but he did observe that the country "continues to have great capacity for food production. My administration has taken significant steps for the improvement of the agricultural sector."

Among those initiatives is an increase in the budget allocation for agriculture development and the well-promoted model farm projects in Chaguaramas which have supplied ministers with oversized produce to show off in Parliament. The Government could earn some real stripes by turning the increase in financial resources to the Ministry of Agriculture and its first real successes on the ground into lever points for real change in the business. The reality at soil level in T&T remains grim for most local farmers, who are still waiting for the new and improved access roads that were promised in the 2009 budget. It's worth noting that the most heralded initiatives in agriculture have come in intensive, science-focused projects that make use of new technologies in grow box, containerised and hydroponics systems that increase yields per square foot significantly.

Potash Corporation through local arm PCS Nitrogen established a model farm specifically to share new techniques of cultivation with local farmers, among the key customers of its fertilizer products. Old-school, land-intensive farming hasn't received the same level of development-focused attention and in the Caroni basin issues of flooding and land tenure remain prickly points of contention between the Agriculture Minister and the farmers who have been working these lands for decades. It isn't as if the Government isn't aware of what it needs to do to deepen the commitment to agricultural production in T&T; farmers have been telling them what they need for years now. Is there the will to pursue concrete development initiatives in parallel with the new next generation farming projects?

How will the superfarms project, which was launched with the award of four licences in January to Supermix Feeds, Technology Farms Ltd, Two Brothers Corporation of Guyana, and Caribbean Chemicals Ltd coexist with legacy farmers? The Minister of Finance articulated the projects in the 2009-2010 budget that should be commanding the Government's attention in the coming months if it hopes to deliver real change in the agricultural sector. Minister Tesheira accurately identified the pressing need for access road development and improvement, problems with praedial larceny, the high cost of agricultural inputs, the issues with financing in the sector and the need to regularise farmers working on state lands and the importance of flood control. It remains for her colleague, Agriculture Minister Piggott, to turn the increases in his budgetary allocation into real change in the sector and to bring sexy back to agricultural development.

Victory for ships’ owners

Victory for ships’ owners | The Trinidad Guardian With rapidly changing technologies in media, many of our knowledge resources are fast disappearing or becoming inaccessible. We are in the process of digitising our archives representing more than 30 years of contemporary Caribbean development linked to more than 10,000 years of regional pre and post colonial history and heritage. Make contact. To support, sponsor, collaborate and partners with our digitisation efforts. Or to develop your own legacy initiatives, and safeguard, preserve, multimedia museum, galleries, archives, make contact. Political parties should discuss women issues during campaign

Udecott inquiry in 2009 Global Integrity Report | The Trinidad Guardian

Udecott inquiry in 2009 Global Integrity Report | The Trinidad Guardian

Triple whammy to hit energy sector | The Trinidad Guardian

Triple whammy to hit energy sector | The Trinidad Guardian

Is it business unusual for the energy sector?

Triple whammy to hit energy sector

• Rising resource costs • Rising energy costs • Rising food prices

...It’s ‘business unusual’...
For the energy sector, it is not “business as usual,” not only because of supply factors, but also related to focus on more efficient and sustainable uses of energy and climate change-related issues.
That has been the view of this blog and others trying to wean not just the economy but the outlook of planners into new directions....as in this article....
 This is the message from energy researchers, ColinDale Marcelle and Ian Ivey, as heads of governments and policy-makers discuss the global financial crisis at the Fifth Summit of the Americas. “The energy sector does not operate in isolation. The major trends shaping its ‘big picture’ future are coming together for a ‘triple whammy’ effect—rising energy costs, rising food prices and rising resource costs,” said Ivey, of the research group NEXT.
For the energy sector, it is not “business as usual,” not only because of supply factors, but also related to focus on more efficient and sustainable uses of energy and climate change-related issues. This is the message from energy researchers, ColinDale Marcelle and Ian Ivey, as heads of governments and policy-makers discuss the global financial crisis at the Fifth Summit of the Americas. “The energy sector does not operate in isolation. The major trends shaping its ‘big picture’ future are coming together for a ‘triple whammy’ effect—rising energy costs, rising food prices and rising resource costs,” said Ivey, of the research group NEXT.
“T&T needs to become far more focused on the opportunities associated with the entire renewable energy sector, because it has invested heavily in the development of considerable expertise in the energy field. “Once the country’s oil and gas fields enter into a decline phase—which may be little more than a decade away—that investment will have little long-term value to the country, unless it is redirected towards future rapid growth opportunity areas in the ‘new energy’ scene. “It is clearly going to be difficult for a small country such as T&T to be an internationally cost-competitive player in renewable energy sectors, such as bio-ethanol and bio-diesel, as the land areas required are vast and the throughput volumes required to justify the capital investments needed are potentially large.
Along with Marcelle, Ivey is the co-author of the recently released Global Foresight Review on renewable energy and Renewable Energy Best Bets Opportunities for T&T (see Niherst.gov.tt), which focus on opportunities and alternatives for T&T outside the oil and gas sector. They were prepared by NEXT Corporation for the National Institute of Higher Education Research, Science and Education.
Increase by 2030
Foresight and innovation research identified several “best bets” for T&T’s energy sector that would lead to greater efficiency in use of existing energy sources and develop businesses built around alternative energy generated from environment-friendly renewable sources. Nine initial potential “best bets” were identified, including developing alternative energy sources by harnessing the power of wave, wind, solar and volcanic energy and growing business by tapping into existing research and technologies. “The potential ‘best bet’ opportunity areas identified could provide the basis of a significant new energy sector focus in T&T,” the authors say. The top three involved use of bio-gas, solar and energy-efficient technologies.
The Global Review cites trends and issues that have an impact on energy markets that point to higher prices for crude oil and natural gas, post the current slump and a 50 per cent projected increase in global energy demand by 2030. Sources referred to include the Annual Energy Outlook, the Medium-Term Oil Market Report of the International Energy Agency, Facing the Hard Truths About Energy Report of the National Petroleum Council and the Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change, among others.
The review was prepared to stimulate thinking about how the global sector is likely to evolve over the next ten years, and thus identify associated threats and opportunities for T&T in the long-term, drawn from a big picture view of what the world may look like in the near future, so as to inform decisions that need to be made today with regard to sector opportunities and threats. Among its findings were that the energy sector’s development is being restricted primarily by traditional attitudes and short-term thinking. A lack of understanding of how quickly the “big picture” may change in future years is hindering change to more sustainable alternatives and limiting the amount of investments being made into innovative opportunities.
'Peak oil’
The energy sector is being forced to revise its directions as the result of a growing awareness that current sources of energy are likely to fail to keep up with future demand, as the capacity to supply world demand is almost already at its peak. This was fed by growing pressure for cleaner and more environmentally sustainable energy sources. “People are now starting to realise that ‘peak oil’ is just a few years away, if not already here. This increases the need to speed up moves towards renewable energy alternatives where favourable conditions apply,” say the authors.
Among these favourable conditions are advances in technology, innovators with creative solutions, growing investment into green and sustainable applications (long-term) and decentralisation of the energy sector, down to a point where we may see total sustainable energy solutions in place for communities, or even individual households and businesses. These already exist in European communities, such as Jühnde in Germany and Güssing in Austria. “The global energy scene is now reaching a ‘tipping point.’ It is changing the balance between ‘old energy’ and ‘new energy.’
“It is easy to become blindsided by short-term blips such as the current low prices in fossil fuel prices and reduced investment into renewable energy. But this is unlikely to last long. “Once the world recovers from the current economic downturn, the major underlying trends will be back in play and ‘old energy’ is likely to face a challenging future as the ‘triple whammy’ effect comes back into play and global policy changes adversely affect the competitive position of fossil fuels, particularly in response to climate change and reducing global emissions by up to 80 per cent (eg, the new goal in the USA).”
Dr Kris Rampersad is
a sustainable development multimedia and multicultural consultant.
Article published:  Fri, 2009-04-17 22:26 — jason
Byline Author: 
Article Date: 
Sunday, April 19, 2009


See more at: http://www.guardian.co.tt/archives/features/life/2009/04/18/triple-whammy-hit-energy-sector#sthash.fbznfMnZ.dpuf


Triple whammy to hit energy sector | The Trinidad Guardian

Skewed development vision in CHOGM concept paper


Skewed development vision in CHOGM concept paper
by


20091129
Dr Kris Rampersad

Despite its very clear identification of Commonwealth challenges, and its theme Partnering for a More Equitable and Sustainable Future, the CHOGM concept paper gives unequal focus to its three key words, 'partnering, equitable, and sustainable.' The paper is heavily slanted to climate change, almost to the oblivion of all else, and even that is skewed to the perspective that all the world's ensuing problems will arise from the climate change phenomenon. This constitutes a business-as-usual, plaster-on-the-sore approach that holds the symptoms for the cause.

It ignores the reality that anticipated challenges from changing climate patterns are really manifestations of the continued imposition of culturally alien financial and other systems on many of the world's communities, unbalanced economic development, neglect of the contributions of women and girls, and inequitable investments in the largely rural-based agricultural sectors in favour of close-to-the-nose urban sectors.

The paper's approach is analogous to the get-rich-quick models that spiraled the financial crisis in the first instance; the failures that have arisen from focus on economic security at the expense of food security; and the disrespect for home-grown, culturally evolved modes of coping with life's challenge that have excluded large segments of the world's peoples from an equal share of development – spring-factors that will exacerbate the impacts of climate change, not the other way around!

The concept can certainly benefit from strengthened emphasis on the need for integrated and multi/cross sectoral approaches that promote balance and equity and that recognise different notions and cultures of development that can add enormously to solutions for the current crises of finance, food security, water and land management, soil conservation, rising temperatures and ocean levels.

As it treats with climate change, there is need in the concept for dedicated attention through paragraphs that:

1. recognise that peoples' cultures are central and pivotal to development around which all else orbits if there is to be widespread buy-in-to the Millennium Development Goals;

2. account for the conditions of and contributions of two-thirds of the Commonwealth–who are women and children–as key starting points (not endpoints) to reversing the horrifying imbalances of poverty, malnourishment, child and maternal mortality that will be aided and alleviated through - not token - but revisionist priority positioning of agriculture, food security and rural in the Commonwealth and others' development agendas.

This would go a long way to help right the lopsided vision in the concept, clouded as it is by climate change as the looming tsunami bearing down on the world, by sharpening its focus on the real subjects of the MDGs: the neglected communities that huddle on tsunami-endangered coastlines, farmers who are squeezed onto precarious hillside to produce the world's food as concrete encroach on prime agriculture lands and the plight of the disadvantaged, including women and children.

1. The CHOGM 2009 Concept Paper: http://www.chogm2009.org/pdf/October%20Concept%20Paper%20Final.pdf

2. Dr Kris Rampersad, a T&T based media, cultural and literary development consultant and international relations director of the Network of NGOS of Trinidad and Tobago for the Advancement of Women, reviews the Concept Paper for the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in the context of status of the global development agenda.
Skewed development vision in CHOGM concept paper | The Trinidad Guardian

Book on Woman bid for Political Leadership & Premiership launches



 Culture, gender and geography in the arena of politics - A new book by Dr Kris Rampersad

From the Trinidad Guardian

Book on Kamla launches today
by Shaliza Hassanali

A book highlighting the quest by the country's first female leader of the United National Congress, Kamla Persad-Bissessar, for prime ministership is to be launched today

Written by journalist, researcher and publisher Dr Kris Rampersad, the book entitled Through The Political Glass Ceiling–Race to Prime Ministership by Trinidad and Tobago's First Female is a compilation of selected speeches of Persad-Bissessar against the backdrop of contending minority-versus-dominant factors of culture, gender and geography, as T&T struggles for articulation and definition of a truly encompassing national identity. The book is expected to be launched at MovieTowne, Port-of-Spain, with the blessing and presence of Persad-Bissessar. Rampersad says the book presents the paradox of politics and society in T&T in the context of the contest for leadership between the country's longest standing political identity, the PNM, and Persad-Bissessar, who is vying for the office of Prime Minister. The book, consisting introduction, context and analyses ranges through the country's experiences with political parties under Dr Eric Williams to the period of voting deadlock at the turn of the century, involving Basdeo Panday and Patrick Manning.


Book on Kamla launches today | The Trinidad Guardian (From the Trinidad Guardian

Book on Kamla launches today,  20100515 by Shaliza Hassanali






A book highlighting the quest by the country's first female leader of the United National Congress, Kamla Persad-Bissessar, for prime ministership is to be launched today

Written by journalist, researcher and publisher Dr Kris Rampersad, the book entitled Through The Political Glass Ceiling–Race to Prime Ministership by Trinidad and Tobago's First Female is a compilation of selected speeches of Persad-Bissessar against the backdrop of contending minority-versus-dominant factors of culture, gender and geography, as T&T struggles for articulation and definition of a truly encompassing national identity. The book is expected to be launched at MovieTowne, Port-of-Spain, with the blessing and presence of Persad-Bissessar. Rampersad says the book presents the paradox of politics and society in T&T in the context of the contest for leadership between the country's longest standing political identity, the PNM, and Persad-Bissessar, who is vying for the office of Prime Minister. The book, consisting introduction, context and analyses ranges through the country's experiences with political parties under Dr Eric Williams to the period of voting deadlock at the turn of the century, involving Basdeo Panday and Patrick Manning.


Book on Kamla launches today | The Trinidad Guardian (From the Trinidad Guardian

Book on Kamla launches today,  20100515 by Shaliza Hassanali

PoS could recapture caribbean fashion hotspot | The Trinidad Guardian

PoS could recapture caribbean fashion hotspot | The Trinidad Guardian

T&T Constitution the culprit

T&T Constitution the culprit | The Trinidad Guardian


(Published Triniad Guardian:http://www.guardian.co.tt/article-6.2.334076.a0d806c55e 
THE VOICE OF THE PEO­PLE

T&T Constitution the culprit

by
Sat May 08 2010
Var­i­ous oth­er analy­ses tell us that the cul­prit is the T&T Con­sti­tu­tion, and there is an in­dis­putable need for con­sti­tu­tion re­form, giv­en ev­i­dent flaws in T&T Con­sti­tu­tions past and present. Both the 1961 (In­de­pen­dence) Con­sti­tu­tion and the 1976 (Re­pub­lic) Con­sti­tu­tion were clear­ly al­ready ob­so­lete from their in­cep­tion, with their un­work­able British im­port of the first-past-the-post/win­ner-take-all mod­el and ev­i­dent fail­ure, as they dis­en­fran­chise large num­bers of vot­ers, as oc­curred in the 1981, 2001, 2002 and 2007 gen­er­al elec­tions. The al­ter­na­tive, pro­por­tion­al rep­re­sen­ta­tion, which of­fers each par­ty num­bers of seats in Par­lia­ment, ac­cord­ing to the pro­por­tion of votes they com­mand, has re­ceived some at­ten­tion, but, like first-past-the-post, it up­holds a par­ty-based sys­tem that gives politi­cians di­vine sta­tus, and places them at the cen­tre of de­ci­sion-mak­ing, which we have seen, with de­mands for a bot­toms-up ap­proach, it­self can­not hold.
The Wood­ing (1971) and Hy­atali (1974) Com­mis­sions, set up to ex­plore con­sti­tu­tion­al re­form, pro­posed an­oth­er, a mixed sys­tem draw­ing from first-past-the-post and pro­por­tion­al rep­re­sen­ta­tive mod­els. This has been re­ject­ed by the PNM's Williams and Man­ning, though all–PNM and the com­mis­sions–premised their ar­gu­ments on our di­ver­si­ty which they de­fined large­ly as eth­nic di­ver­si­ty. Man­ning put for­ward, in 2006, a "work­ing doc­u­ment" on con­sti­tu­tion­al re­form, drawn up pri­mar­i­ly by a one-man com­mis­sion (for­mer Pres­i­dent El­lis Clarke), and af­ter-the-fact staged some pub­lic "con­sul­ta­tions"–an ap­proach in­ter­pret­ed as pay­ing lip ser­vice to pub­lic opin­ion.
Ex­ec­u­tive pres­i­dent?
His draft pro­vid­ed for an ex­ec­u­tive pres­i­dent, as in the USA, which would give even more ex­ec­u­tive pow­ers to an al­ready max­i­mum leader of the first-past-the-post sys­tem, with­out cor­rect­ing (but rather fur­ther emas­cu­lat­ing) those in­stru­ments and in­sti­tu­tions that pro­vide checks and bal­ances on such "Mas­sa" pow­er. These in­clude the ju­di­cia­ry and the leg­is­la­ture, and oth­ers as the Om­buds­man, the Di­rec­tor of Pub­lic Pros­e­cu­tion, the Com­mis­sion­er of Po­lice, the mag­is­tra­cy, Com­mis­sions for In­tegri­ty, Ju­di­cial and Le­gal Ser­vices, Po­lice Ser­vice, Pub­lic Ser­vice, Teach­ing Ser­vice. etc. It al­so pro­pos­es to re­strict the prin­ci­ple of free­dom of ex­pres­sion (the me­dia) by al­ter­ing the Bill of Rights.
An­oth­er con­sti­tu­tion, draft­ed by the self-as­signed 2006 Fair­ness Com­mit­tee of four, leaned on a fur­ther amal­ga­ma­tion–of the Man­ning mod­el (though pro­duced be­fore Man­ning's) sup­port­ing an ex­ec­u­tive pres­i­dent, along with a mixed sys­tem of pro­por­tion­al rep­re­sen­ta­tion and first-past-the-post, as rec­om­mend­ed by the Wood­ing and Hy­atali Com­mis­sions. One chal­lenge af­ter the oth­er to the con­sti­tu­tion has sur­faced, since the NAR, to show that the con­sti­tu­tion is not just dog-eared, but com­ing apart at the seams and ir­rel­e­vant in a rapid­ly-chang­ing world:
1. The PNM's chal­lenge of Win­ston "Gyp­sy" Pe­ters' dual cit­i­zen­ship;
2. The 2002 18-18 dead­locked elec­tions which were not catered for in the con­sti­tu­tion;
3. Oth­er chal­lenges, main­ly re­lat­ed to cock­fight­ing, by Pan­day and Robin­son–ap­point­ments through the Sen­ate of peo­ple who had been de­feat­ed in the polls;
4. The chick­en-and-egg cri­sis pre­cip­i­tat­ed by the Stand­ing Or­der for elect­ing a Speak­er be­fore con­ven­ing the House, when nei­ther par­ty want­ed to pro­pose a Speak­er.
The con­sti­tu­tion, say the ex­perts, has out­lived its use­ful­ness. To jus­ti­fy his quest for an ex­ec­u­tive pres­i­dent/US-styled gov­er­nance sys­tem, PNM leader Patrick Man­ning has sought to jus­ti­fy his high-hand­ed ap­proach to de­ci­sion-mak­ing with ar­gu­ments that the ex­treme­ly di­verse na­ture of the so­ci­ety and their many com­pet­ing in­ter­ests made it dif­fi­cult to gov­ern, and need­ed "strong" lead­er­ship. But at the risk of sound­ing like a prophet­ess, the di­ver­si­ty of T&T is, in­deed, its pri­ma­ry char­ac­ter, and any­one who can­not man­age our di­ver­si­ty is doomed to fail­ure!
Any­one who wants to gov­ern ef­fec­tive­ly must unite the di­ver­si­ty, rather than seek ever more ex­clu­sive pow­er to over­rule it; (the con­se­quences of ig­nor­ing the pub­lic over an ex­tend­ed pe­ri­od have been graph­i­cal­ly il­lus­trat­ed by the events of re­cent weeks). The ex­perts tell us that the con­sti­tu­tion–and the West­min­ster-styled par­lia­men­tary sys­tem it es­tab­lish­es can­not ac­com­mo­date that di­ver­si­ty; oth­ers, like the PNM–un­de­ni­ably the most ex­pe­ri­enced par­ty in T&T–ar­gue that nei­ther could pro­por­tion­al rep­re­sen­ta­tion.
Both, it seems, are part­ly in the right; but whol­ly wrong.
Lead­er­ship cri­sis–sin­gle par­ty or coali­tion
The search for the ide­al mod­el has been around the de­bate of whether the sin­gle par­ty or coali­tion gov­ern­ment is the bet­ter mod­el. Both have been tried and test­ed and found want­i­ng. As an­a­lyst Dr Bish­nu Ra­goonath ob­served, the three oc­ca­sions when our gov­ern­ments pre­ma­ture­ly col­lapsed have been as sin­gle-par­ty gov­ern­ments–Pan­day's in 2001 and Man­ning's in 1995, and 2010. Ma­jor­i­ty rule by a max­i­mum leader, with pow­ers equiv­a­lent to the di­vine right of kings, in a sin­gle par­ty is los­ing sway on a pop­u­la­tion be­com­ing more as­tute and un­will­ing to con­tin­ue as blind, un­ques­tion­ing, sheep-like fol­low­ers.
Gov­er­nance by any one ma­jor­i­ty eth­nic group has be­come un­savoury to grow­ing and more vo­cif­er­ous el­e­ments, de­mand­ing recog­ni­tion of our cul­tur­al and oth­er di­ver­si­ty, de­nied in Williams "No Moth­er In­dia, no Moth­er Africa" max­im which seemed not to grasp the com­plex­i­ty of the iden­ti­ty is­sue. Nor have coali­tions worked ei­ther; not two ex­am­ples, the al­liance gov­ern­ments of 1986 and 1991–both of which evolved out of forces op­pos­ing the PNM and in­clud­ing Pan­day's UNC, Robin­son's De­mo­c­ra­t­ic Ac­tion Con­gress, Karl Hud­son-Phillips' Or­gan­i­sa­tion for Na­tion­al Re­con­struc­tion, Lloyd Best's Tapia and var­i­ous oth­ers.
They failed be­cause...
They failed, not be­cause the struc­ture of the coali­tions was test­ed, nor be­cause of chal­lenges of man­ag­ing our com­plex di­ver­si­ty–they nev­er got a chance. They failed be­cause–as with the max­i­mum leader mode of sin­gle-par­ty pol­i­tics–man­ag­ing the di­verse egos of a man-rat-dri­ven po­lit­i­cal cul­ture, con­tin­u­ous­ly test­ed the con­sti­tu­tion and the gov­er­nance mod­el, pro­mot­ing the em­i­nence of con­sti­tu­tion­al lawyers and le­gal Mes­si­ahs. They failed be­cause of un­en­light­ened or mis­guid­ed lead­er­ship that failed to re­spect the needs and wish­es of its peo­ple.

http://www.guardian.co.tt/article-6.2.334076.a0d806c55e

Kamla vows to help arts, local authors | The Trinidad Guardian

Kamla vows to help arts, local authors | The Trinidad Guardian

Commonwealth praise for book on Kamla’s speeches

Commonwealth praise for book on Kamla's speeches



A valuable addition to research on gender and women in politics in the Commonwealth. That's how Dr Mark Collins, director of the Commonwealth Foundation, described the new book by Dr Kris Rampersad–Through The Political Glass Ceiling–the Race to Prime Ministership by Trinidad & Tobago's first female, Kamla Persad-Bissessar, Selected Speeches. Speaking at the Commonwealth launch of the book at the Partners' Forum of the Ninth Women's Affairs Ministers meeting (9WAMM) in Barbados on Friday, Collins noted the need for research and documentation identified by various speakers and workshops at the meeting.

He said the book and the project for promoting social research and publishing which it launches were answers to that need. He also pointed out that it was not common for a chair of the Commonwealth to change mid-term, as happened in this case, with the change of Government in T&T which makes Persad-Bissessar the first female Caribbean chair-in-office of the Commonwealth. The launch was attended by representatives from across the Commonwealth. A copy of Through the Political Glass Ceiling was presented to chairperson of the foundation, Simone de Comarmond who endorsed Collins appreciation of the book as a needed documentation on gender development.

The launch was in keeping with the forum's theme, Gender Issues in the Economic Crisis Recovery and Beyond: Women as Agents of Transformation. All proceeds of the launch go towards supporting Caribbean research and publishing. Compiled, with introduction, contexts and analyses by Rampersad, the book features selected speeches of Persad-Bissessar against the backdrop of the roles of gender and geo-politics among other factors in the contest for leadership between Persad-Bissessar and the country's longest standing political entity, the People's National Movement. Rampersad is a journalist, researcher and writer who has been exploring the diversity of Caribbean society and cultures for some 20 years. Through the Political Glass Ceiling is available at all major bookstores. 
Wed Jun 09 2010


Commonwealth praise for book on Kamla’s speeches | The Trinidad Guardian

The Trinidad Guardian -Online Edition Ver 2.0

The Trinidad Guardian -Online Edition Ver 2.0

Women's Action Mandate

Women’s action mandate

 

International Relations Director of the Network, Dr Kris Rampersad said the Network is demanding these issues be integrated into all policies and decision making, budget design and implementation and action.

The release stated that the Women’s Mandate for Action presents women as a political constituency as has labour, the private sector and religious groups.

“Our constituency is one to whom political parties can make commitments for action and to whom they can be held accountable,” she said.

Rampersad noted that their goal is to transform the culture of politics in the country by ensuring all persons have equal opportunity to participate in public life and to ensure there is no discrimination either direct or indirect, on the basis of gender, ethnicity, class, age or sexuality.

She explained that women have been excluded from political decision-making at the highest level but they are confident of the positive impact their contribution will have on the development of our society.

“Our mandate for action which has emerged from our work of women’s organisations over many years and from commitments agreed to by successive governments as the Convention of the Elimination of All Rights and the Nairobi Forward Looking Strategies. These provide the basis for a comprehensive framework for the advancement of women and the enjoyment of basic rights to gender equity, the principles of which must further inform the national gender policy,” she said.

Rampersad added that a gender policy must reaffirm the commitment in the constitution to gender equality and social justice and provide a framework to guide and inform transformation of existing inequitable gender relations.



Trinidad and Tobago's Newsday : newsday.co.tt :

Caribbean Copyright Link > About Us > News

Caribbean Copyright Link > About Us > News

Dr_Kris_Rampersad.pdf (application/pdf Object)

Dr_Kris_Rampersad.pdf (application/pdf Object)

Global Integrity Report

Global Integrity Report

Two women not good enough - Dr Kris on Senate Appointments

two out of nine is tremendously disappointed...It is high time we move beyond the rhetoric and value and recognise the potential for leadership at all levels in our country's women - Dr Kris Rampersad Education, Outreach and Advocacy Specialist
NGOs on Independent senators: Two women not good enough by 20100613 The Network of NGOs of Trinidad and Tobago for the Advancement of Women is disappointed that of nine Independent senators named by President George Maxwell Richards, only two are women. "This is by no means intended to cast aspersions on the choices of Independent senators," said Network International Relations Director Dr Kris Rampersad, "but two out of nine is tremendously disappointed given that over the past few terms, precedent has been set to keep an almost 50 per cent gender balance on the Independent benches with four or five female Independent senators. "And it is particularly unsatisfactory, given the President's own acknowledgement of the lack of appreciation of the capabilities of women in our country at the swearing in of Trinidad and Tobago's first female Prime Minister, Kamla Persad-Bissessar," Rampersad said. "We all heard how eloquently the President lamented the 'deficit' in the country's dealings with women and to quote him: 'There is no gainsaying that our women have made tremendous strides in the public as in the private sectors...and there have existed and continues to exist a certain reservation, on the part of men as well as women, in genuinely respecting the ability as well the entitlement of women...and many of us do not repose full confidence in our women to act independently of patronage of one kind or another.' "Given that, the network finds it very difficult to believe that the President could not find women in our population who could competently occupy seats on the Independent benches. "It is high time we move beyond the rhetoric and value and recognise the potential for leadership at all levels in our country's women. "Meanwhile, the network congratulates the announcement of Opposition Leader Keith Rowley to have its two female senators lead Opposition business in the Upper House with Port-of-Spain South MP Marlene McDonald as the country's first ever woman chief whip and Pennelope Beckles as the first female Senate minority leader. "We note that the People's Partnership has not yet named its full slate of 16 senators, and given its strong gender appeal in the campaign for the elections, we anticipate that it will ensure that women share an equal number of seats to men in the Government benches of the Upper House," Rampersad said. For more visit the GLoCal Knowledge Pot https://krisrampersad.com/ and make contact to support development of these archives for learnings and research. Two women not good enough | The Trinidad Guardian

Facebook | Note to Culture Stakeholders: Strengthening TT Culture Sector

Facebook | Note to Culture Stakeholders: Strengthening TT Culture Sector

New Book Race to Prime Ministership - Kamla Persad-Bissesar - Kris Rampersad

Grow Safeguard Preserve Create A MultiMedia Legacy

With rapidly changing technologies in media, many of our knowledge resources are fast disappearing or becoming inaccessible. We are in the process of digitising our archives representing more than 30 years of contemporary Caribbean development linked to more than 10,000 years of regional pre and post colonial history and heritage. Make contact.

To support, sponsor, collaborate and partners with our digitisation efforts. Or to develop your own legacy initiatives, and safeguard, preserve, multimedia museum, galleries, archives, make contact.


New Book Race to Prime Ministership - Kamla Persad-Bissesar - Kris Rampersad - Open Salon

Through the political glass ceiling - IFACCA, the International Federation of Arts Councils and Culture Agencies

Through the political glass ceiling - IFACCA, the International Federation of Arts Councils and Culture Agencies

Final Report ARCADE LILLE 13-14 novembre 2008.pdf (application/pdf Object)

Final Report ARCADE LILLE 13-14 novembre 2008.pdf (application/pdf Object)

Global Integrity Report

Global Integrity Report

Trinidad News, Trinidad Newspaper, Trinidad Sports, Trinidad politics, Trinidad and Tobago, Tobago News, Trinidad classifieds, Trinidad TV, Sports, Business

Trinidad News, Trinidad Newspaper, Trinidad Sports, Trinidad politics, Trinidad and Tobago, Tobago News, Trinidad classifieds, Trinidad TV, Sports, Business

Book written on Kamla’s speech

Book written on Kamla’s speech

SoulRebelProductions.com - Your CARIBBEAN Connection - Clear deficits in Caribbean culture policies, says UNESCO consultant

SoulRebelProductions.com - Your CARIBBEAN Connection - Clear deficits in Caribbean culture policies, says UNESCO consultant

Trinidad and Tobago, UDECOTT enter Global Integrity’s “watchlist” « Voice of the People

Trinidad and Tobago, UDECOTT enter Global Integrity’s “watchlist” « Voice of the People

SoulRebelProductions.com - Your CARIBBEAN Connection - Clear deficits in Caribbean culture policies, says UNESCO consultant

SoulRebelProductions.com - Your CARIBBEAN Connection - Clear deficits in Caribbean culture policies, says UNESCO consultant

TRINIDAD: Group wants political parties to discuss women issues during campaign | Caribbean Daily News: Caribbean News Every Day

TRINIDAD: Group wants political parties to discuss women issues during campaign | Caribbean Daily News: Caribbean News Every Day

Summit of the Americas Report Human Prosperity

The Summits of the Americas Secretariat launched the Summits Virtual Platform n preparation for the Fifth Summit of the Americas to promote the participation of different social actors in the Summits Process by using Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs). 

 

The results of the fora are presented for the consideration of the National Secretariat, National Coordinators and Permanent Missions during the negotiation of the text of the Declaration to be undertaken in the framework of the Summit Implementation Review Group (SIRG) meetings.

More at Glocal Knowledge Pot https://krisrampersad.com/human-prosperity-priorities-for-the-americas/


Final_Report_Human_Prosperity.pdf (application/pdf Object)
Further details at: 

TRINIDAD: History Beckons in Trinidad's Snap Election - News Library - News & Events - PeaceWomen

TRINIDAD: History Beckons in Trinidad's Snap Election - News Library - News & Events - PeaceWomen

TRINIDAD: History Beckons in Trinidad's Snap Election - News Library - News & Events - PeaceWomen

TRINIDAD: History Beckons in Trinidad's Snap Election - News Library - News & Events - PeaceWomen

News Power

Grow Safeguard Preserve Create A MultiMedia Legacy

With rapidly changing technologies in media, many of
our knowledge resources are fast disappearing or becoming inaccessible. We are in the process of digitising our archives representing more than 30 years of contemporary Caribbean development linked to more than 10,000 years of regional pre and post colonial history and heritage. Make contact.

To support, sponsor, collaborate and partners with our digitisation efforts. Or to develop your own legacy initiatives, and safeguard, preserve, multimedia museum, galleries, archives, make contact.


News Power

NGOs hail King, Ramdial in Gender Affairs | The Trinidad Guardian

NGOs hail King, Ramdial in Gender Affairs | The Trinidad Guardian

EntityCube - Kris Rampersad

EntityCube - Kris Rampersad

Book traces T&T PM’s road to victory | NationNews - Barbados

Book traces T&T PM’s road to victory | NationNews - Barbados

Trinidad News, Trinidad Newspaper, Trinidad Sports, Trinidad politics, Trinidad and Tobago, Tobago News, Trinidad classifieds, Trinidad TV, Sports, Business

Trinidad News, Trinidad Newspaper, Trinidad Sports, Trinidad politics, Trinidad and Tobago, Tobago News, Trinidad classifieds, Trinidad TV, Sports, Business

Culture and urban development in the North/South perspective | The Power of Culture

Culture and urban development in the North/South perspective | The Power of Culture

Caribbean Net News: Clear deficits in Caribbean culture policies, says UNESCO consultant

Caribbean Net News: Clear deficits in Caribbean culture policies, says UNESCO consultant

Clear deficits in Caribbean culture policies, says UNESCO consultant: Grenadian, Caribbean News at Caribdaily.com

Clear deficits in Caribbean culture policies, says UNESCO consultant: Grenadian, Caribbean News at Caribdaily.com

Trinidad News, Trinidad Newspaper, Trinidad Sports, Trinidad politics, Trinidad and Tobago, Tobago News, Trinidad classifieds, Trinidad TV, Sports, Business

Trinidad News, Trinidad Newspaper, Trinidad Sports, Trinidad politics, Trinidad and Tobago, Tobago News, Trinidad classifieds, Trinidad TV, Sports, Business

Culture and urban development in the North/South perspective | The Power of Culture

Culture and urban development in the North/South perspective | The Power of Culture

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Through The Political Glass Ceiling - the Race to Prime Ministership by Trinidad & Tobago’s first female, Kamla Persad-Bissessar

Kamla Persad-Bissessar's Selected Speeches, compiled, with introduction, contexts and analyses by Dr Kris Rampersad, the book explores the seeming tug-of-war between polarisation in the political arena vis-a-vis other more cohesive cultural forces at play in Trinidad and Tobago society. It also examines the roles of gender and geo-politics among other factors in the contest for leadership
between Mrs. Persad-Bissessar as the first female leader of a political party, the United National Congress, in Trinidad and Tobago and the country's longest standing political entity, the People's National Movement. Ranging from the country's experiences with political parties under Dr Eric Williams, through the period of the National Alliance for Reconstruction and ANR Robinson to the period of voting deadlock at the turn of the century involving Basdeo Panday and Patrick Manning, the book provides roadmaps of Persad-Bissessar’s journey to the defining moments of the May 2010 snap election.Selected speeches of Mrs. Persad-Bissessar form the backdrop to these explorations. Speeches presented relate to Mrs. Persad-Bissessar’s “Stepping through the glass ceiling - Decisive moments in her political decision-making”; “ Vision of National & Political Unity”; the gender factor – “to be woman and leader”; “engaging partner watchdogs” and in her various other roles as Leader of the Opposition, Member of Parliament, Attorney General, Minister of Legal Affairs and Minister of Education as well as those presented in other forums as election platforms and interactions with civil society organizations and individuals. Dr Rampersad’s introduction, A Clash of Political Cultures - Cultural Diversity & Minority Politics in Trinidad & Tobago, traces the current political environment to the immediate pre- and post independent periods as Trinidad and Tobago struggles for articulation and definition of a truly all-encompassing national identity from its diversity of “mother cultures.”

Rampersad is a journalist, researcher and writer who has been exploring the diversity of Caribbean society and cultures for some 20 years. Her first book, Finding a Place (2002), captures from early journalistic writings the impact on literature of the encounters of peoples of the various mass immigration streams of the 19th Century with special reference to the experiences of Indian descendants in Trinidad and Tobago. She has also written and presented research to international forums with a multicultural third-world, rural perspective on the interplay of culture, politics,
economics, gender and literature in the Caribbean, using data from home-grown situations vis-à-vis imported data and theories to make a case for new approaches that more adequately reflect the realities of Caribbean societies. Her policy critiques and recommendations through oral presentations, print and video documentaries on culture, media, agriculture and information and communication technologies, have been accepted by organisations as the Commonwealth Foundation, World Summit on Information Society, EU-ACP Technical Centre for Agriculture and Rural Cooperation, and UNESCO. She is listed among the International Who’s Who in Cultural Policy, Planning and Research. Available at all major bookstores. For further information contact: krislit2@gmail.com or call (1-868) 352-9728 or 390-9367.


Through the Political Glass Ceiling.
ISBN: 978-976-8228-00-0 9 Paperback
For further information contact: lolleaves@gmail.com or call (1-868)  390-9367




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Demokrissy: T&T Constitution the culprit | The Trinidad Guardian
Jun 15, 2010 T&T Constitution the culprit | The Trinidad Guardian · T&T Constitution the culprit | The Trinidad Guardian. Posted by Kris Rampersad at 8:20 AM · Email ThisBlogThis!Share to TwitterShare to Facebook ...http://kris-rampersad.blogspot.com/
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It is placing increasing pressure for erasure of barriers of geography, age, ethnicity, gender, cultures and other sectoral interests, and in utilising the tools placed at our disposal to access our accumulate knowledge and technologies towards eroding these superficial barriers. In this context, we believe that the work of UNESCO remains significant and relevant and that UNESCO is indeed the institution best positioned to consolidate the ..... The Emperor's New Tools ...
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  Borne out of the still bellowing black smoke of  insurrection  that had split the nation wide open along all its fractured fault lines see...