Newsroom

Children smiling
May 13, 2016

Under the US $5.8 million regional project, St. Kitts and Nevis received US $900,000 to support reform efforts, including the provision of training, capacity building, and technical assistance to the New Horizons Rehabilitation Centre, the Magistrates Court, and the Department of Probation and Child Services.

Officials discussing the recent Close Out of  the RRACC project in Antigua.
April 15, 2016

Farmers and communities in Antigua and Barbuda are better equipped to withstand drought, improve food production, and ultimately enhance the country’s resilience to the negative impacts of a changing climate. The United States Ambassador to Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean, Linda Taglialatela, highlighted this positive development while addressing a close out ceremony for the Antigua arm of the US$9.5 million “Rallying the Region to Action on Climate Change (RRACC)” Project in the OECS.

Ambassador Taglialatela with Antigua officials
April 15, 2016

The United States Ambassador to Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean, Linda Taglialatela, congratulated government officials in Antigua and Barbuda for their ongoing juvenile justice reform efforts during a close out ceremony for the Antigua segment of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID)-funded Juvenile Justice Reform Project (JJRP) in the OECS.

Computer-based, education programs are one of the many innovations promoted through USAID-support.
March 30, 2016

At-risk youth are more successfully reintegrating into society and the OECS region’s juvenile justice landscape is transforming as a result of a U.S. Government supported program implemented by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). United States Government (USG) officials, their St. Lucian counterparts, and other partners recently met to close out activities in St. Lucia and celebrate the four-year US $5.8 million Juvenile Justice Reform Project’s (JJRP) successes.

March 30, 2016

At-risk youth in Suriname are benefiting significantly from the United States Government’s USAID-funded Kari Yu Youth Development and Juvenile Justice Program, implemented by the Pan American Development Foundation. Over 100 additional youth are equipped with life skills and vocational training as a result of the Youth Development and Juvenile Justice program. The new skills the graduates have acquired from the program will significantly increase their employment potential and ability to contribute to their communities and countries.

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