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Autor/inBarrow, Christine
InstitutionBernard Van Leer Foundation (Netherlands)
TitelEarly Childhood in the Caribbean. Working Papers in Early Childhood Development, No. 47
Quelle(2008), (76 Seiten)
PDF als Volltext kostenfreie Datei Verfügbarkeit 
Spracheenglisch
Dokumenttypgedruckt; online; Monographie
ISSN1383-7907
ISBN978-9-0619-5102-5
SchlagwörterDisabilities; Caring; Poverty; Crime; Mothers; Economically Disadvantaged; Childrens Rights; Foreign Countries; Punishment; Socialization; Child Rearing; Laws; Public Policy; Child Development; Social Development; Physical Development; Social Support Groups; Television Viewing; Fear; Juvenile Gangs; Drug Abuse; Young Children; Dominica; Trinidad and Tobago
AbstractThis report looks at the development and socialisation of children under 5 years of age in two Caribbean countries, Trinidad and Tobago and Dominica. It involved fieldwork in four very different communities as well as extensive discussion with academics and professionals. Too little is known about child socialisation in the Caribbean, and this research, the authors believe, breaks new ground. It shows that although most children are loved and cared for, the lives of many are scarred by poverty. The two countries the authors worked in are by no means the poorest in the developing world. But they both have substantial poor populations. Poor families are offered only the most basic help by the state. Child-rearing in the communities they studied remains highly traditional. Corporal punishment is common and children are often ignored, shouted at or belittled. Both countries have signed up to the Convention on the Rights of the Child, and their laws and policies pay attention to it. But the day-to-day lives of children have changed little. This applies particularly to children living in poverty, with a disability or with some other form of disadvantage. But the picture is not one of unrelieved gloom. Child-rearing in the region does seem to be getting less regimented and more caring, and there is a growing realisation that the first few years of a child's life are vital to his or her social as well as intellectual and physical development. However, many of the people they met said that Caribbean communities are less supportive than in the past. This means that children are cared for increasingly by their mothers. Despite stereotypes of extended Caribbean families, many mothers are not involved in a wide network of female support. The feeling is that families are drawing in on themselves because of cultural change, including more television watching, and the fear of crime, especially from gangs of drug-fuelled young men. A bibliography is included. (Contains 1 footnote.) [This paper was written with Martin Ince. (ERIC).
AnmerkungenBernard van Leer Foundation. P.O. Box 82334, 2508 EH, The Hague, The Netherlands. Tel: +31-70-331-2232; Fax: +31-70-350-2373; e-mail: pubsrequests@bvleerf.nl; Web site: http://www.bernardvanleer.org
Erfasst vonERIC (Education Resources Information Center), Washington, DC
Update2017/4/10
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