Featured on the cover Front cover, Left to Right: The monument Quaw’s Quest honours William Quaw, one of the 295 enslaved persons who at emancipation occupied the lands on which Cave Hill campus is currently situated. Professor Eudine Barriteau, Deputy Principal, delivers lecture entitled: Cave Hill in the Contemporary: The University as a Social Space, April 18, 2013. Professor Sir Hilary Beckles (center) receiving the certificate of Institutional Accreditation from BAC Chair, Ms Yvonne Walkes in the presence of BAC’s Executive Director, Ms Valda Alleyne and Professor Eudine Barriteau, Chair, Cave Hill Campus Accreditation Steering Committee, July 16, 2013. Prime Minister of Barbados, the Right Hon Freundel Stuart, Q.C.; M.P. seals the Time Capsule during the 50th Anniversary closing ceremony, December 18, 2013. Professor Emeritus Sir Woodville Marshall signing a copy of From Plantation to University Campus: the Social History of Cave Hill Barbados during the book launch, November 27, 2013. Mrs Jacqueline Wade, Campus Registrar, followed by Mr William Iton, University Registrar, leading academic procession at the Inter-faith Church Service in celebration of the 50th Anniversary, February 17, 2013. Back cover, Left to Right: Professor Sir Hilary Beckles, Mr Damani Parris (President, Guild of Students) and the Hon. Ronald Jones M.P., Minister of Education, Science, Technology and Innovation with plaque which marks the breaking of the ground at the Nelson Mandela Freedom Park, November 27, 2013. Naming of the Leslie Robinson Building in honour of Professor Leslie Robinson first Principal (ag) of the Cave Hill Campus, October 7, 2013. (L-R) Lady Mary Beckles, Mrs Jacqueline Wade, Dr Paul Altman (Chairman, Cave Hill Campus Council), Professor Eudine Barriteau, the Most Hon P.J.Patterson (former Prime Minister of Jamaica), Dr Lilieth Robinson Bridgewater (daughter of Professor L. Robinson) and Professor Sir Hilary Beckles. Sir Keith Hunte and Professor Sir Hilary Beckles at the naming and opening of the Keith Hunte Hall, November 13, 2013. Mr Anthony “Gabby” Carter performing at the unveiling of Quaw’s Quest, March 15, 2013. The University of the West Indies MISSION STATEMENT To advance education and create knowledge through excellence in teaching, research, innovation, public service, intellectual leadership and outreach in order to support the inclusive (social, economic, political, cultural, environmental) development of the Caribbean region and beyond. P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 01 The University of the West Indies CAVE HILL CAMPUS Contents Chairman’s Statement ........................................ 02 Principal’s Report ................................................ 05 Administrative Transformation ......................... 26 Celebrating Our Leaders .................................. 32 Teaching and Learning ........................................ 34 Research and Development .............................. 42 Cave Hill @50 ..................................................... 46 Student News ...................................................... 48 Outreach ............................................................... 53 Administrators of the Campus ........................ 58 Membership of Campus Council ..................... 59 Financial Summary ............................................. 60 Publications ........................................................... 63 Campus Events .................................................... 68 Saluting Achievements ........................................ 74 Campus Staff ........................................................ 79 Statistics and Charts ........................................... 82 Benefactors ........................................................... 91 The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 02 A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 Chairman’s Statement Dr Paul Altman Chairman It is with the greatest of pleasures that external and well-recognised experts.the Cave Hill Campus’ Annual Report to It is of significance that the reviewing Council is presented for the Academic Year team called attention to the quality of the 2012/13. This pleasure is heightened by the Campus’ Self-Study Report, its ability to fact that the year saw the 50th Anniversary engage in in-depth self-analysis, and to of the opening of Cave Hill Campus to present its own plan of action to rectify serve Barbados and the countries of the its limitations – an approach which was Organisation of the Eastern Caribbean described as “a best practice”. The expert States. team drew attention to the fact that the This Report which represents the activities institution has been better than most and achievements of the Campus amply universities world-wide in anticipating demonstrates its historic and continued and preparing for the impact of the global commitment to supporting the development economic crisis. The team noted, as well, of the Caribbean region. It is fitting that the vision and leadership of the Campus’ during the academic year the Campus senior management, the soundness of engaged in a series of activities that not only its quality assurances processes and of publicly analysed and presented its history the internal systems available to support but also celebrated the contributions of Teaching and Learning. its former staff by the naming of buildings While the Campus’ operations continued to in their honour. It is also truly fitting that feel the adverse effects of the government’s the contribution of our slave ancestors be debt as well as the massive cuts to its recorded in Quaw’s Quest. budget, of particular concern is the potential The region is well aware of the solid threat to local and regional development of reputation of the Campus in the areas of the intended new funding model. teaching, learning, research, publication and Despite these threats, there is ample proof service. This has been soundly underpinned of the Campus’ determination to provide by the award of the Certification of the peoples of Barbados and the Region Institution Accreditation for a period of six with the high quality education and training years by the Barbados Accreditation Council necessary for sustainable development. (BAC) on the recommendation of a team of This commitment is evident in the The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 03 continued achievement of good examination the sponsorship of the Business Plan performance at both the postgraduate and Competition. Of significant importance the undergraduate levels. is the success of prior awardees who not The Campus must be congratulated on the only have gone on to establish their own graduation of the first batch of students businesses but in the case of Bookline, under the full five-year Medical Science has emerged the winner of a regional programme. Of similar importance is the competition for young entrepreneurs. growing success of the Bachelor of Fine Students from the Faculty of Law continued Art offered by the Errol Barrow Centre to demonstrate their excellent debating for Creative Imagination, and the strength skills by their successes at International of the Faculty of Law’s LL.B. and LL.M. Mooting Competitions held during the programmes. year. The Report notes with pride the The Report highlights the fact that despite success of the fledgling Academy of Sports the limited resources available, continued as cricketers, netballers and hockey players demonstrate their skills in local and regional emphasis is being placed on expanding and competitions. improving quality assurance mechanisms, the use of Information Technology (IT) Finally, the Report is mindful of the across the Campus to support teaching significant contributions made to its and learning, the optimisation of the achievements during the year by the administrative processes to ensure governments of Barbados and the OECS, maximum efficiency and the strengthening of the private and public sectors, international the Health and Safety programme to ensure donor agencies and its alumni. This that students and staff enjoy a supportive contribution takes on added importance study and work environment. given the grim financial climate with which the country and region are faced. The Campus must be congratulated for maintaining its tradition of excellence in In that context, we wish to recognise publication with its output during 2012/13 the staff and student body of the Cave of refereed publications. The Campus must Hill Campus for their patience, creativity, also be congratulated on the leadership role initiative and support as the Campus which its academics took during the year continues on its path to providing excellence to develop research projects which are of in teaching learning, research and community national and regional importance. Of note service. is the work to address violence against women and the effects of climate change on ... there is ample proof of the Campus’ Caribbean weather patterns. Attention must be given as well to the determination to provide the peoples range of opportunities which the Campus provides for its students and their resulting of Barbados and the Region with the successes. Thus, during the review period, the First Caribbean International Bank- continued to support participants from the high quality education and training Student Entrepreneurial Empowerment Development (SEED) programme through necessary for sustainable development. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 04 P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT Members of the UWI’s Executive Management congratulated the Cave Hill Campus on attaining its 50th Anniversary. Clockwise from top: The Honourable Mr Justice Marston Gibson, Chief Justice of Barbados is greeted by UWI Chancellor, Sir George Alleyne at the Campus’ 50th Anniversary Interfaith Thanksgiving Service; Vice- Chancellor Professor E. Nigel Harris reads a lesson at the Thanksgiving Service; L-R: Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Principal, UWI Open Campus, Professor Hazel Simmons- McDonald, Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Principal, UWI St Augustine Campus, Professor Clement Sankat, Pro-Vice- Chancellor and Principal, UWI Mona Campus, Professor Gordon Shirley and Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Principal, UWI Cave Hill Campus, Professor Sir Hilary Beckles. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 05 Principal’s Report During the academic year 2012/2013, Professor Sir Hilary Beckles The University of the West Indies, Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Principal Cave Hill commemorated 50 years of service to the people of the Caribbean and beyond under the theme Cave Hill @50 professorial lectures delivered by Professors Path to Prosperity. This concept was Pedro Welch, Curwen Best, Jane Bryce, taken from founding father the Rt Excellent Evelyn O’Callaghan and Frederick Ochieng- Errol Barrow’s Address to the Graduation Odhiambo of the Faculty of Humanities and Class of 1968, in which he has exhorted that Education. The Campus also invited the the people of Barbados “must be helped to Prime Minister of Barbados to deliver the know as a settled conviction, that this University concluding lecture later in the year. is almost their only path to prosperity”. During the year, as an indelible memorial Led by the Campus 50th Anniversary of the Campus’ gratitude to members of Committee chaired by former Campus its community who had made outstanding Registrar Mr Andrew Lewis, the campus contribution to its developing, several community, during the period under review, buildings were named in their honour. was engaged in a number of academic The first to be memorialized was the late exercises and events that served to place the Professor Leslie Robinson, who in October campus in its historical and contemporary 1963 was appointed the first acting principal context. These events included an Interfaith of the College of Arts and Science, the Thanksgiving Church Service, attended forerunner to the Cave Hill Campus. The by dignitaries including His Excellency, following months saw the naming of the Sir Elliot Belgrave, Governor General of Main Library in honour of Sir Sydney Martin, Barbados, Chancellor Professor Sir George the Campus’ first substantive Principal; the Alleyne, Vice-Chancellor Professor E. Nigel opening and naming of the Keith Hunte Harris and members of UWI’s Executive Hall, in honour of former Principal Sir Keith Management; the official unveiling of the 50th anniversary logo by the Hon Ronald Jones, Minister of Education, Science, 50th Anniversary academic exercises and Technology and Innovation; public lectures by Professor Sir Hilary Beckles, Professor events ... served to place the campus in its Eudine Barriteau, Professor Emeritus Sir historical and contemporary context. Woodville Marshall, and Sir Keith Hunte; The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 06 P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT The Hon Ronald Hunte, the naming of parts of the buildings the certificate Institutional Accreditation by Jones, Minister of Education, Science, that house the Faculty of Humanities & the Barbados Accreditation Council (BAC) Technology Education and Faculty of Medical Sciences in for a period of six years. The award of the and Innovation honour of Emeritus Professor Sir Woodville certificate is discussed elsewhere in this unveiling the Cave Hill Campus 50th Marshall and Mr Victor Cook, the Campus’ report but the Campus wishes to record Anniversary Logo first Bursar, respectively; the naming of the its gratitude to Deputy Principal Professor while Deputy building which houses the Guild of Students Eudine Barriteau who led the accreditation Principal Professor Eudine Barriteau in honour of the Guild’s first Secretary process and the entire campus community and Pro-Vice- and second President, Mr Andrew Lewis; who contributed to the successful outcome. Chancellor and the naming of the Clinical Skills Building, Principal Professor However, the Campus’ celebrations took Sir Hilary Beckles at Jemmotts Lane, in honour of Professor place against a background of deepening look on. Emeritus Sir Errol Waldron and the naming financial crisis occasioned by the increasing of the Balcony of the 3Ws Pavilion in honour debt owed the Campus by the Government of Mr Floyd Reifer. of Barbados. In addition, during the year, Emerging from the research of Sir Woodville the Government of Barbados enunciated a Marshall who had been commissioned to new policy for financing Barbadian students write the history of the space on which the at UWI in which students will pay for Campus stands, the campus community tuition and government for economic cost commemorated in Quaw’s Quest, the as of the 2014/15 academic year. This new 295 enslaved persons who at Emancipation funding model would require Barbadian occupied the Cave Hill Campus space. students to pay between BD$6,000 and Sir Woodville’s full history of the Campus BD$9,000 per year for programmes in space From Plantations to University Campus: Faculties other than Medical Sciences. The The Social History of Cave Hill, Barbados Campus is deeply concerned that, based was launched towards the end of the on experience elsewhere in the University, calendar year. a significant number of students will be One of the most significant events that unable to raise their tuition either through occurred during the year was the award of loans or personal savings. The Campus The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 07 is also aware that payment by installment has not succeeded and in-fact has resulted in large number of defaults. The policy of deregistration of defaulting student had led to constant conflicts with the student population. The Campus is extremely concerned of the potential threat to the development of the human resource of the region when the proposed funding policy is implemented. Despite the massive cut in government contribution the Campus stands assured that the vision of the Prime Minister of GRADUATION Graduation 2013Barbados, the Rt Excellent Errol Barrow and the leadership of the UWI will be PERFORMANCE actualised. The Campus continues to contribute considerably to national and A total of 1,463 students graduated with regional development and transformation. Bachelor degrees in 2012/13. Approximately Now the most regional of Caribbean 11% (155) received First Class Honours, 24% campuses, with a vibrant international (347) received Upper Second Class degrees, dimension, and with the continued support 44% (642) received Second Class degrees of the Governments of Barbados and the and 22% (3160) received Pass degrees. region as well as the private sectors, and At the post-graduate level 419 persons the campus community, Cave Hill reaffirms received degrees. This represents an its commitment to drive the modernisation increase of 11% over 2011/2012. Sixteen process of its stakeholders as they seek persons graduated with doctoral degrees greater competitiveness and sustainability. including 10 persons from the Faculty of Humanities, 2 from the Faculty of Medical Sciences and 4 from the Faculty of Science and Technology. FTirset ncl apsse rsons graduated with MPhil Udpepegrr Seeceosn:d 9 from the Faculty of Science and Lower Second Technology and 1 from the Faculty of Social pass Sciences. Two hundred and sixty-seven (267) persons received Master’s degrees. One Hundred and sixty (160) persons from the Faculty of Social Sciences, 36 persons from the Faculty of Humanities and Education, 32 persons the Faculty of Law, First Upper Lower Pass Class Second Second 30 persons from the Faculty of Science and Technology and 9 persons from the Faculty of Medical Sciences. Thirty-nine (39) Figure 1: Pie chart showing persons received EMBAs and 87 received Undergraduate Performance Advanced Diplomas. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 08 P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT EXPANDING OPPORTUNITIES National de Artes, Escuela de Espectaculos y AND ENHANCING Variedades, Danza Contemporanea de Cuba, THE CURRICULUM and the University of Havana. On-campus enrolment for 2013/14 Faculty of Law stands at 8, 634. The Faculty of Social Faculty undergraduate and postgraduate Science accounts for 5,039 students or admission figures remained strong, with approximately 58% of the total enrolment. students from across the region entering Students in undergraduate programmes both the full-time and part-time LL.B. account for approximately 86% (7,388) programmes, the Postgraduate Diploma of the total enrolment figure. Barbadian and LL.M. programmes. A total of 213 nationals comprise approximately 83% of LL.B. students graduated in the course of undergraduate enrolment and for 69% of the academic year, with 13 obtaining First graduate enrolment. Trinidadians nationals Class Honours degrees. Sixty-two students (386) make up the largest number of non- graduated with Postgraduate Diplomas or national students, followed by Jamaicans LL.M. Degrees. (167) and then by students from St Vincent and the Grenadines (129). Males constitute 32% of total enrolment and The Faculty of Medical Sciences full-time enrolment stands at 52% (4302). As the Campus began its celebrations to mark 50 years since its establishment, it was fitting that the newest of its Faculties should have produced the first graduates of the full Enhancing and Expanding five-year undergraduate programme which The Curriculum was introduced in September 2008. At a ceremony held on June 12, 2013, twenty-five The Faculty of Humanities and recently qualified doctors recited the oath Education that marked successful completion of their EBCCI’s student Twenty-one (21) new students entered the formal educational programme and their performing in Bachelor of Fine Arts programme at the induction into the medical fraternity.Cuba. start of Academic Year 2012/13 In his address to the class, Emeritus bringing total enrolment in this Professor Henry Fraser likened them to the new programme to 73. first pioneering graduates of the fledgling During the year both University College of the West Indies in undergraduate and graduate 1954 and challenged them to live up to the students at EBCCI’s got an reputation established by members of that opportunity to showcase their class and the many others who followed. talents during a visit to Cuba. Ten of the new graduates attained passes at Through the Cuban Ministry honours or distinction level in one or more of Culture, the students disciplines in the final examination and three participated in workshops and will be awarded an honours degree based on performances at the Instituto excellent performance at both pre-clinical Superior de Artes, Escuela and clinical stages. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 09 Faculty of Medical Sciences Graduating Class 2013. During the year the Faculty moved into programmes with a view to: expanded space in the newly refurbished a. Identifying gaps in graduate programmes; Clinical Skills Building adjacent to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital. Faculty business b. Identifying areas of course duplication is now being conducted at three different and overlap across programmes; geographical sites without an increase in c. Reviewing the course content, course support staff. However, through use of outlines, examinations and research technology and a willingness to adapt, exercises utilized in graduate courses; the staff is hoping to overcome the early d. Identifying relevant accreditation bodies challenges as they continue the work of for various graduate programmes; serving students. Meanwhile, the offices, e. Providing recommendations seminar rooms and skills labs are already being utilized for teaching and examinations. The committee has submitted its report and the recommendations are under consideration. The Faculty of Social Sciences The Faculty also placed special emphasis During the year, the Faculty of Social on its research degree with a focus on Sciences sought to enhance its internal increasing the number of MPhil/PhD processes for monitoring and improving graduates by attracting more students to academic quality assurance. As part of these degrees and improving the throughput this process, the Faculty of Social Sciences of research students. The Faculty has Quality Assurance Committee (SQUAC) implemented an Examiner’s meeting devoted was established with its purpose to act as to research students, and is beginning a liaison committee between the Faculty of to see the benefits in terms of improved Social Sciences and the Office of Quality monitoring of the progress of research Assurance Committee (OQAC) and students. coordinate Faculty initiatives related to The Faculty continued to celebrate the academic quality assurance. academic achievements of its students, and The Faculty also established a small in addition to the prizes and awards on offer, committee to review its graduate has established a Deans’ list and four new The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 10 P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT prizes in honour of former Deans of the double degree with the University of New Faculty and the long-standing Administrative Brunswick and slated to commence in Officer in the Faculty Office. The prizes are: August 2013. a. Prof. Frank Alleyne Plaque for the Best During the year, the Academy of Sports Academic Performance by a student in intensified its mandate to blend academics the Department of Economics; and sport. New partnerships were forged b. Dr Farley Brathwaithe Plaque for with overseas universities and there were the Best Academic Performance by a continued efforts to provide student student in the discipline of Sociology; mentors. The move towards the elite level of training has strengthened with cricket c. Dr George Belle Plaque for the Best being the huge success story and football Academic performance by a student and track and field poised to follow in its in the discipline of Political Science wake. Significant success has also been student; achieved across the general suite of sports d. Mrs Cynthia Layne Plaque for the offered by the Academy. Social Sciences Undergraduate Student of the year. During the year the Faculty also participated Institutional Accreditation in a major course harmonization exercise with the Faculties of Social Sciences at the On July 16, 2013, the Cave Hill Campus Mona and St. Augustine Campuses and the received the certificate of Institutional Open Campus. The exercise resulted in the Accreditation from the Barbados harmonization of course codes and titles for Accreditation Council (BAC) for a period equivalent courses across all four entities. of six years – June 18, 2013 - June 17, 2019. The certification followed the submission News Focus on Sports Management of a comprehensive Self-Study Report and Certification a review visit from March 25, 2013 - March 28, 2013 by a team of international experts, On October 17th 2012, the Academy of appointed by the Barbados Accreditation Sports launched its Certificate in Sport Council (BAC) to evaluate the Cave Hill Management at a press conference Campus readiness for accreditation. The attended by the Minister of Family, team was composed of: Culture, Sports and Youth, the Honourable Stephen Lashley. The certificate which is • Mr John Randall (Team Leader) and Educational Consultant. Mr Randall composed of 4 courses: Introduction to Sport was formerly Chief Executive, Quality Management, Introduction to Sport Marketing, Assurance Agency for Higher Education, Sociology of Sport and Essentials of Sport United Kingdom and formerly the Psychology provides exposures to the basic Director of Professional Standards and theory, principles, concepts and practices of Development, Law Society of England sport management. Students may upgrade and Wales. to the UWI Certificate in Management and Administration of Sport. This 30 • Prof James McKillop a member, of the credit program allow for matriculation to General Medical Council (United the BSc. Sport Sciences degree which is a Kingdom) and formerly Muirhead The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 11 Ms Valda Alleyne, Executive Director, BAC, Ms Yvonne Walkes, Chairman, BAC, Professor Sir Hilary Beckles, and Professor Eudine Barriteau with Certificate of Institutional Accreditation. Professor of Medicine, University of (WIGUT), the UWI Alumni Association, Glasgow, Scotland. Barbados Chapter and the President and • Ms Miriam Samaru, Principal, Hugh members of the Guild of Students. Wooding Law School, Council of Legal In their final report to the BAC, the team Education, Trinidad and Tobago and noted that the Campus’ Self-Study was formerly Solicitor General, St. Lucia, reflective and analytical, with appropriate and identification of challenges faced by the • Dr David Wissmann, member Board Campus. The Campus was commended for of Trustees, Higher Learning the production of draft action plan which Commission, USA; Chair, Department set out key performance indicators and of Law and Justice and Professor of implementation timelines in respect of areas Sociology, Avila University, Kansas identified for improvement in the course of City, USA. the preparation of the self-study. The team noted that “using the self-study in this way is The Team participated in discussion good practice.” with over 280 members of the Other findings of the team included that. Campus community. These included • The Campus had done well, and better representatives of the Board for than most higher education institutions, Undergraduate and Graduate studies, in anticipating the impact of the global members of Cave Hill’s Senior recession; Management, Deans and staff of all the Faculties as well as with representatives of • The investment in the Certificate the Barbados Workers Union (BWU), the in University Teaching and Learning West Indies Group of University Teachers (CUTL) was a major strength and that the programme represents good The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 12 P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT practice, and is in advance of the (CQAO) initiated a formal follow-up process formal training and development in July 2012 in order to gauge the extent to programmes expected of faculty which the recommendations of the survey in many other universities; reports had been implemented. • The Campus has strong These recommendations included: leadership at the highest level, re-structuring of the teleconference characterized by foresight, information sessions for regional students effective environmental (hosted by the Marketing Office); inclusion scanning and innovation; of FAQs on the Admissions website; • The Instructional intensified promotion of support services Development Unit was available to students seeking off-campus a valuable partner in the accommodation; introduction of additional process of programme cashiers at the University Bookshop during development and that peak periods; and the completion of a in addition to its responsibility for comprehensive review and update of Faculty running the CUTL programme, it was Handbooks for graduate students (by the available for consultation on matters of School for Graduate Studies and Research). curriculum design, assessment design The second New Student Survey held and instructional technique; between September 03 and October 01, • The Educational Media Services (EMS) 2012 indicated significant improvements was also an important support to in student satisfaction in several teaching and learning, through the areas, including: user-friendliness and provision and training in the use of comprehensiveness of the New Student’s technological teaching tools and that Handbook; efficiency of the application the workshops and seminars provided process; usefulness of the undergraduate improved the pedagogical and technical New Student Orientation Forum; waiting skills of faculty members; times at the Bursary (cashiers); information on off-campus accommodation; and • University wide systems of programme efficiency of service at the Bookshop. approval are sound, and meet best Student participation in orientation events international practice. (Matriculation Ceremony, Orientation Fair) In a Town Meeting held directly after the and academic advisement sessions also presentation of the certificate, the Principal increased significantly. thanked staff for their involvement in the Following the success of the pilot project development of the Self-Study and in the with the Faculty Humanities and Education visit of the team of experts. in 2011-12, the CQAO coordinated the phased extension of online undergraduate course evaluations to the Faculties of Law Campus Quality and Social Sciences. In semester 2, 2012- Assurance Office 13, undergraduate students in all three Faculties were able to complete their course Having successfully administered the New evaluations at their convenience via an Student Survey for the first time in 2011- online questionnaire which was available 12, the Campus Quality Assurance Office from April 02 - 21, 2013. Lecturers’ course The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 13 evaluation reports were completed and delivered to their Faculties by the end of June. The CQAO continued to support organisational enhancement through ad hoc research designed to inform decisions and plans in a number of areas. Such projects included: an Alcohol & Drug Awareness Survey among undergraduate students (conducted on behalf of the Office of Student Services), a review of existing Campus accommodations for students with disabilities (on behalf of the Disability Advisory Committee) and a review of the Service Excellence Campus Quality 2013 teleconference information session Assurance Office (on behalf of the Marketing Office). The The CQAO continued to support the work launched a CQAO continued to formally follow-up on of the Campus’ Service Excellence Circle dedicated website. departments’ progress in implementing the (SEC) in its ongoing review of customer recommendations of research reports. service standards. Up to the time of writing, SEC review teams had worked with Service Leaders in seven departments to update Quality Management service standards. The revised standards are In pursuance of the University’s strategic being formally reviewed by the CQAO in an goal of providing “a high-quality student effort to achieve greater consistency across experience” the CQAO proposed and departments. designed a UWI Cave Hill Campus Student Charter. The Charter is intended to define Outreach the quality of experience that enrolled During the year, the CQAO launched students can expect at the Campus, its website (www.cavehill.uwi.edu/ establish clear principles of a staff-student campusquality). As part of the University partnership to achieve that standard and Office of Planning & Development’s reinforce a student-centered approach to research seminar series, the Quality Campus operations. Assurance Coordinator also led a seminar The approved Charter is expected entitled “First impressions, early opinions to be introduced to all new students and evidence-based interventions: The UWI and employees as part of their general Cave Hill Campus New Student Survey”. The orientation to UWI Cave Hill. Its principles CQAO continued to support the Centre will also offer broad guidance to current for Excellence in Teaching & Learning in students and employees as regards academic the delivery of the Certificate in University programmes as well as administrative and Teaching & Learning Programme (CUTL) by support services. facilitating sessions on Quality Assurance in Higher Education. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 14 P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT RESEARCH AND requirements of the University’s Strategic INNOVATION Plan 2012-2017. These units include: • The Unit for Leadership In an effort to promote research and Competitiveness and Harmony publication among junior staff members, (UNLEACH) led by Dr Akhentoolove the Faculty of Social Sciences launched Corbin; the Faculty of Social Sciences Non-Tenured • Workplace, Health, Behaviour and Research Fund. The fund was established Performance Unit by by Drs Dion with an initial budget of BD$250,000 and Greenidge Cheryl Cadogan-McClean; during the year considered applications from Non-Tenured members of academic staff • Accounting, Audit and Corporate to fund or partially fund research projects Governance Unit led by Dr Philmore expected to lead to Double Blind Refereed Alleyne and Ms Diana Weekes-Marshall; Journal Articles and/or Book Chapters. • Corporate Finance and Wealth A total of BD$107,000 was disbursed. Management Research Unit led by With a commitment to raise the research Ms Stacey Estwick; profile and facilitate the dissemination of • Credit Research Unit led by Mr Terry the Faculty’s research and publication to a Harris; wider audience the Faculty also established • Public Sector Management Research the Faculty of Social Sciences Cave Hill Online Unit (PSMRU) led by Dr Wayne Research Portal. The portal which is linked to Charles-Soverall. the Social Sciences web provides a catalogue of publications by members of the Faculty. These units, together with the Tourism Each month, the portal features the work of Research Centre and the SEED programme a faculty member. have already started to drive the department’s research agenda. Existing During the year, the Faculty convened a research initiatives such as the Caribbean series of training seminars in Proposal Consumer Confidence Index, the Writing and Accessing Grant Funding as part CARICOM Stock Market Report and the of its research and innovation thrust, and in Workplace Absenteeism project continue a desire to aggressive secure more research to be part of the Department’s research grants. output. Dr Justin Robinson New Research Dean, Units on-stream Research Week Faculty in Management As part of Research Week 2013, the of Social Sciences Studies Faculties were engaged in a number of The Department of public activities and presentations: Management Studies The Faculty of Law featured a number ought to expand its of posters on both the Faculty’s history research output by and current activities, as well as a display creating a number of books and articles published by of research units, members of Cave Hill Law’s academic placed within the staff. The Law Library offered a tour and The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 15 talk on the same day. In addition the following facility members made public presentations: • Professor Rose-Marie Antoine on the ‘Importance of Research to Regional Contemporary Jurisprudence’, • Dr David S. Berry on the ‘The Caribbean Court of Justice and Your (Regional Rights)’, and • Ms Alana Lancaster on ‘Law and the Environment’. All three talks were very well received. The Faculty of Medical Sciences The Faculty hosted a visit from new projects: Students at Professor Roger Pederson, Director Research Week • Strengthening capacity to monitor Open House. of Research at the Ann McLaren Human Development in Barbados Laboratory for Regenerative Medicine, and the OECS. This project follows a University of Cambridge and one of request from the UNDP for SALISES his graduate students, Dr Victoria to partner with them on their Mascetti whose research involves the Poverty Studies Project involving molecular and genetic basis for human Multidimensional Poverty Measurement embryonic stem cell differentiation and the United Nations’ Human with respect to the cardiac lineage. The Development Index. visitors also took part in a number of events including a Symposium and Panel • The Global Wealth Chains Project. Discussion on the Challenges of Diabetic Foot Disease in Barbados and a lecture UNDP/CARICOM/Government of and panel discussion entitled Stem Cells Italy Youth-Innovation Project at the Heart of Regenerative Medicine Following the successful Implementation - Prospects and Problems of Stem Cell of the first phase of the Youth Innovation Therapy in the Caribbean. Project component “Knowledge Transfer and Networking in the areas of film production and SALISES Projects broadcasting for Youth”, the Errol Barrow Centre for Creative Imagination EBCCI) During the year, the Sir Arthur Lewis received a second grant of US$339,000 Institute for Social and Economic Studies to execute Phase 2. This phase involved (SALISES) embarked on the following the expansion of the project to include The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 16 P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT OECS member states and wider regional Awards and Grants audiences. The project, which included for Research training in film production skills, has featured five short films, made by the young Mrs Heather Hennis, Faculty of Medical participants, that have been screened on the Sciences received a grant from the Arnot Italian national broadcaster Radiotelevisione Cato Foundation to investigate the Italiana 3 (RAI3)/Agenda del Mondo as well ‘readiness for self-directed learning among as in Barbados, St. Lucia and Suriname. pre-clinical students in the MBBS program at the Cave Hill Campus, University of the West Indies’. Motion Picture Arts Certificate (MPAC) Dr Lyndon Waterman, Faculty of At the request of the Division of Youth, the Science and Technology was also EBCCI submitted a proposal for funding to awarded a grant of BD$45,000 from the provide further training in film production BIDC to study the Characterisation of Hot through its Motion Picture Arts Certificate Pepper Mash. for graduates of the Basic Digital Media (BDM) programme offered by the Division of Youth under the Ministry of Culture, IDRC Grant awarded for “Sustainable Sport and Youth. Provisional acceptance of Water Management under Climate Professor the proposal for a grant of BD$80,000 has Change in Small Island States of the Gladstone Yearwood, been received and it is expected that the Caribbean” Director, EBCCI, programme will begin in January 2014. The UWI for was awarded a three-year with students. research contract valued at BD$3.0 million by the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) Canada. The project entitled Sustainable Water Management under Climate Change in Small Island States of the Caribbean is led by CERMES but involves researchers from the Mona and St Augustine Campuses as well as the Climate Change Centre, The Caribbean Institute for Meteorology and Hydrology (CIMH) and the University of Guyana. European Union contract for “Global- Local Caribbean Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation Scenarios” CERMES is also engaged in the European Union funded €613,000 research contract entitled Global-Local Caribbean Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation Scenarios The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 17 A group of International students on Campus. (GloLoCarSce). CERMES has responsibility INTERNATIONALISATION for undertaking the freshwater related aspects of the research. The projects The Campus continued to focus on reducing involves partners from Stockholm its dependency on government funding Environment Institute, The Cropper through the internationalisation of its Foundation, CARDI and the Climate student population. Ten agreements were Change Centre. signed with universities and educational entities in Canada, China, Brazil, and the USA. These were: Enhancing Food Security from the Fisheries Sector in the Caribbean: • Concordia University College of Alberta Building the Capacity of Regional • Zhejiang Wanli University and National Fisherfolk Organisation • AMIZADE Networks • New College Florida UWI, represented by CERMES, entered into a US$25,400 contract with CANARI, ending • Chattanooga State Community College 31 January 2014, to provide services for the • Centennial College project Enhancing Food Security from the • Homburg Academy Fisheries Sector in the Caribbean: Building • Universidade Federal de Pernambuco the Capacity of Regional and National Fisherfolk Organisation Networks to Participate • California State University Monterey Bay in Fisheries Governance and Management • China University of Political Science funded by the European Union (EU) and Law EuropeAid programme. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 18 P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT As part of the internationalisation of Cave Work on the expansion of the Centre for Hill and the development of Science and Resource Management and Environmental Technology, Dr Anthony Fisher, Director, Studies (CERMES) continued. Funded from International Relations, applied for and part of a USAID project grant to CERMES received a BD$40,000 grant from the to support the expansion of its teaching and InterAmerican Development Bank (IDB) research activities in climate change, the to take three members of the planning project saw the construction of an extension committee for the Centre for Food to the CERMES building to provide Security and Entrepreneurship(CFSE) additional accommodation and teaching on an educational tour of Brazil’s top facilities, computer lab and student study three universities – University of Sao areas, alternative emergency exits and an Paulo, University of Campinas and the upgrade in the network system to facilitate University of the State of Sao Paulo, better access to the internet. which collectively account for fifty of Construction started in October 2012 and that country’s publications in science and was completed just behind schedule but in technology. It is expected that formal time for start of semester in August 2013. agreements with these universities will link the Campus to the top agricultural and Construction of the Student food sciences institutions in Brazil. Accommodation at Clarendon also continued during the period and the first block was completed and prepared for occupation in January 2013. The Campus CAPITAL DEVELOPMENT proceeded with the project on a phased basis which will eventually see a total The Campus continued to focus on the construction of approximately 200 beds in expansion of its physical environment and three four-storey blocks with administrative enhancement of students’ amenities as well and other office facilities. as with improving spaces for teaching and In the first phase of the project one of the Keith Hunte Hall office accommodation. three blocks of rooms and associated site works to make the block fully functional commenced in March 2011. This block has been completed, furnished and equipped. The site works which consisted of drainage, roads, car park, guard wall and landscaping were also completed. Phase 1 of the project was completed for the start of semester 2 (January 2013). A portion of the escarpment extending from the back of the CERMES and the Medical Sciences buildings and terminating on the University Drive is being developed as the Nelson Mandela Freedom Park. This will consist of two large level areas and will accommodate an amphitheatre, gazebos, bar, washrooms and security kiosk. The work on The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 19 this site, scheduled to start in August 2013, is being undertaken in phases. Phase I will provide for the completed terrace areas and retainer walls and should be completed in March 2014, while Phase II will see the build out of the other facilities on site. The Campus also commenced design work on the Centre for Moral and Spiritual Development (formerly called the Multi- Faith Centre) during the year under review. The facility will provide space for students and staff to retire for reflection and worship in quiet surroundings. It will also house the Centre for African Studies programme which is currently being developed. The entire set of design work for this Centre was completed and tenders are to be and in-kind support over the past four Sir Hilary Beckles invited. years supported the further development presenting award to Mr Andrew Rawlins, Design work was also started on the West of the Campus, particularly in times of Chief Financial Stand at the athletics and football stadium. global economic uncertainty. More than 300 Officer, SOL (Caribbean) Ltd. The West Stand will seat approximately 600 individuals and organisations, representing persons in its tiered seating but will also private citizens, including alumni; the house the programme in Sports Science, a private sector; Government and statutory joint MSc programme with the University agencies; development banks; donor of New Brunswick, Canada. Work on agencies; foundations; and non-governmental the building started in summer 2013 and organisations have made contributions. is scheduled to be completed in 2014. However, teaching in the MSc programme will commence in January of 2014 in Cave Hill Signs MOU with CCJ alternative accommodation. A Memorandum of Understanding on Institutional Cooperation between the ACKNOWLEDGING Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) and the OUR PARTNERS Faculty of Law, Cave Hill, was countersigned by Professor Sir Hilary Beckles on The 2013 Benefactors Awards Ceremony November 5, 2012. The MOU which will be which celebrated the Campus’ 50th in effect for an initial period of four years Anniversary and its partnership with its and is renewable, includes the provision of donor community was held on May 30, personnel by the CCJ to conduct workshops 2013 at the Errol Barrow Centre for and seminars for students and academic Creative Imagination. The ceremony staff; joint continuing of legal education provided an opportunity to thank and programme and joint yearly colloquium honour those institutions, organisations and to discuss research academic papers and individuals whose extraordinary financial common legal issues. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 20 P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT Mrs Glenda HRMAB Collaborates University of Florence for cultural and Gilkes, President with DOMS scientific cooperation with the EBCCI. The HRMAB and Deputy Principal, MOU’s main objective is the establishment Professor Eudine In a ceremony held at the Cave Hill Campus of an exchange programme initially in the Barriteau sign MOU in the on July 29, 2013, the Human Resource fields of Architecture, Urban and Regional presence of Management Association of Barbados Planning, Industrial Design, Sustainable Senator Dr the (HRMAB) and the Cave Hill Campus Development, Heritage Conservation, Hon Esther Byer Suckoo and through the Department of Management and the Arts. Plans are being made for the Senator Harry Studies (DOMS) agreed to collaborate implementation of the first collaborative Husbands. on a number of initiatives. These include project “CARITALENTS – Youth and the establishment of a Centre for the Territory which is intended to develop development of HR Management Practice, expertise, tools and innovative training the design and delivery of fee-based as part of youth policies in the Caribbean postgraduate courses and seminars, joint region. research on HR best practices, and the support of students pursing studies in HR management. Senator, Dr the Hon Esther STUDENT-CENTRED Byer Suckoo, Minister of Labour, Social Security and Human Resource delivered the The Office of Student Services (OSS) feature address and the MOU was signed by enjoyed success in securing local Mrs Glenda Gilkes, President of HRMAB and internships from external partners. Deputy Principal Professor Eudine Barriteau. These internships include: Price Waterhouse Coopers (PWC) Campus Signs MOU for Cultural Price Waterhouse Coopers offered three and Scientific Cooperation (3) internships and hired fourteen (14) graduates. These graduates possessed On June 24, 2012, the Campus signed a first or second-class accounting degrees in Memorandum of Understanding with the combination with minors such as Finance, The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 21 Economics, Mathematics and Information Barbados Manufacturing Technology or Banking and Finance. Association (BMA) Ernst & Young Services Ltd (EY) During the second semester the BMA Eight graduates received permanent approached the OSS to resume its positions. One person was offered a collaboration with the department to temporary position and six (6) students offer internships in the manufacturing gained internships including one student industry. As a result five students were with a disability. placed in marketing and sales positions. Inter-American Development Bank The Nation Publishing Co. Ltd. One male economics major student The Nation Publishing Co. Ltd took on was recruited for a paid summer one Major in Literatures in English student internship. Agency feedback indicated as an intern for the summer of 2013. that the student’s performance exceeded This internship was obtained through expectation. He was described as very participation in the 2012/2013 Mentorship pro-active in his problem solving and Program. reporting practices. Grantley Adams Sport Facilities at Paradise Park International Airport Four students were recruited during the The Ryan Brathwaite track was completed summer. Two of these students were in January 2013 and was officially certified recommended by OSS. Ryan by the International Association of Athletics Brathwaite Federations (IAAF) on April 18, 2013. Track The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 22 P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT represent Barbados in the Regional Cricket Competition in July 2013. Those players were Shakera Selman, Malissa Howard, Aneka White and Rechelle Griffith. Ms Selman captained the Barbados’ team and also played in Sri Lanka as a regular representative of the West Indies in the world 20/20 championship. Netball and Volleyball Netball’s Division 6 had a very successful season, winning the 2 best of 3 games to secure their 1st place position. At least five (5) student athletes were Construction of the state of the art sporting selected for national duty throughout the facilities continues at Paradise Park. Plans are academic year 2012/13 as they participated underway for the completion of the Grand in the 2013 Fédération Internationale de Stand. Housed under the stand will be the Volleyball (International Federation of sports lab, gym, sports shop, classrooms Volleyball), commonly known as the FIVB and offices. Men’s and Women’s World Championship and the North, Central America and Caribbean Volleyball Conference Sports Victories (NORCECA) Qualifiers. These were: Ms Dania Hamilton (St. Lucia) Curacao, UWI Sport Scholarships May 2013. Mr Alain London and Mr In order to enhance the Academy’s Jamaal Nedd (Barbados) Cayman Islands, existing sports programmes and develop October 2012. Ms Akilah Phillips and Ms elite programmes in other disciplines, it Shani Leacock (Barbados) Trinidad, May is necessary to attract the best talent to 2013 and St. Croix, July 2013. Cave Hill Campus. Sport scholarships will assist the Academy in soliciting talent to The UWI Inter-Campus Games strengthen the Blackbirds teams to maintain The 28th staging of the UWI Games their dominant position in national leagues. formerly the Inter Campus Games was To this end the UWI Sport Scholarship held from May 20 – 31, 2013 at the Mona and Grant has been formally established. Campus. It was a very intense competition The Academy, together with the Marketing with hosts and many time winners, Mona, Officer will be promoting the availability of crossing the finish line just ahead of these awards across the region. defending champions Cave Hill, with a four The UWI Blackbirds team won the annual point victory. The final standings showed UWI C.O. Williams Inter Parish 20/20 Mona 96, Cave Hill 92, St. Augustine 68. cricket tournament held at the 3Ws Oval. Four members of the UWI Blackbirds women’s cricket team were selected to The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 23 Appreciation The Cave Hill Campus wishes Digicel to extend its sincerest gratitude Ernst & Young Caribbean to the following individuals and institutions who have tangibly First Citizens Bank supported the Campus during the Academic Year 2012/13 Fisheries Division (Barbados) Gildan Active Wear SRL PRIVATE INDIVIDUALS Goddard Enterprises Ltd Dr. Paul Altman Gun Hill Art Studio Mr. Richard P. Brown Jr Esq Innotech Services Limited Mr. Andrew Bynoe Insurance Corporation of Barbados Ltd Mr. Edmund Cohen Lee’s Bistro and Catering Services Mr. Eddie Edghill Lime Grove Life Style Centre Mall Ms. Anita Guidos Nation Publishing Company NuEdge Gallery LOCAL AND REGIONAL DONORS National Heritage Department (Barbados) Barbados Chamber of Commerce National Conservation Barbados Museum and Historical Society Commission (Barbados) Barbados Shipping and Trading Co. Ltd National Cultural Foundation BHL Group Nation Publishing Company Caribbean Community Climate Peter Moores Barbados Trust Change Centre Price Waterhouse Coopers Cave Shepherd & Co. Ltd Sagicor Life Inc. CIBC FirstCaribbean International Bank SOL Group Inc. Coastal Zone Management Solid Waste Project Unit (Barbados) Unit (Barbados) The Bank of Nova Scotia The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 24 P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT INTERNATIONAL DONORS The Nature Conservancy (Sub-grant from USAID for Local Area Management American Society for Plant Pathology Project – LAMP) OIP Award The Peter Moores Foundation AusAID United Nations Educational, Scientific British High Commission – Foreign and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and Commonwealth Office University of Missouri CINVESTAV, University of Mexico Universidad Nacional (UNAL) Embassy of Cuba US Agency for International Embassy of the People’s Republic Development (USAID) of China USA – Higher Education for ESRI – Conservation Grant Programme Development European Union (EU) Government of Spain DONORS OF International Institute for Sustainable SCHOLARSHIPS Development (IISD) AND PRIZES International Union for the Conservation American Foundation for the UWI of Nature (IUCN) Scholarships (AFUWI) National Fish and Wildlife Foundation Anguilla Bar Association National Oceanic and Atmospheric Anthony & Joy Bland Charitable Trust Administration Arnott Cato Foundation Trust Organization for the Prohibition Barbados Association of Medical of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) Practitioners Peter Moores Foundation Barbados Association of Psychiatrists Shell Western Supply and Trading Barbados Bar Association Stockholm Environment Institute Barbados Employers’ Confederation The Moorings Barbados International Business Association (BIBA) The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus P R I N C I PA L ’ S R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 25 Barbados Investment & Development Charles Duncan O’Neale Lodge No.1720 Corporation Organization of American States Barbados Public Workers’ Co-operative Credit Union Ltd R.L. Seale & Co. Ltd CIBC FirstCaribbean International Bank Barbados Public Workers’ Co-operative Credit Union Ltd David Nathaniel King Memorial Trust Sagicor Life Inc. District Grand Lodge of Barbados Shell Western Supply & Trading Co. Ltd Dr. Harry Bayley & Dr Anne Bayley Memorial Trust Society for Caribbean Linguistics Dr. Lionel Stuart Memorial Trust SOL Group Inc Dr. Maisha Emmanuel Systems Consulting Ltd Dr. The Hon. Sir Richard Telford Georges Memorial Trust Cheltenham, Q. C. The Bank of Nova Scotia Dr. Trevor Carmichael, Q.C. UWI Alumni Association Eastern Caribbean Group of Companies (Barbados Chapter) Mr. Edmund Hinkson UWI Alumni Circle (Cave Hill) Ernst & Young UWI (Cave Hill) Co-op Credit Union Ltd Gildan Active Wear SRL West Indies Group of University Teachers (WIGUT Government of Barbados Graham Gooding Trust Fund Institute of Chartered Accountants of Barbados KPMG Kurleigh King Memorial Trust Mendes Boyd (formerly the Canadian Alumni Association) Merck, Sharpe & Dohme Moore Paragon (Caribbean) Ltd The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 26 A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 Administrative ADMINISTRATION: Transformation ADVANCING UWI STRATEGIC GOALS Operational Plan Emphasising During the review period, Efficiencythe Campus continued to During the academic year under review, Administration was involved in the task advance strategic goals of achieving of shaping its input into the Campus’s administrative transformation even operational two-year plan in keeping with demands of the 2012-2017 strategic process. as it sought to mitigate the impact The effort had resulted in strengthened of financial challenge on service commitment to the change process, the advancement of creative strategies for delivery. The past academic year concretizing and implementing a range of also saw the institution seeking to critical objectives and execution of some key initiatives. This process took place enhance and implement requisite against the backdrop of challenge and policies in such areas as safety and uncertainty in the economic environment but it was recognized, that whatever the health in keeping with international circumstances, maintaining an emphasis on trends and the demands of the increased efficiencies, enhanced levels of modern university space. service delivery and high commitment to the university’s central mission remained critical to institutional success. Enhancing Internal Operation Processes The celebration of Cave Hill’s 50th anniversary and The Campus, within this context, continued to focus on its internal operation processes the mounting of a sustained slate of activities saw to bring increased levels of efficiency. A Campus Administration playing a key role as the number of financial processes in the Bursary operate on Banner 8.8, PeopleSoft version institution reflected on its history and charted the 8; and Touchnet, a new online payments path forward. system, was developed for roll out in the Academic Year 2013/2014. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 27 Student Focussed Campus Administration The ongoing effort to improve services to consideration a number of stated student continues in its students saw Student Admissions review the concerns, was successfully relaunched for ongoing efforts application process to provide for increased the 2013-2014 Academic year. to improve services to feedback on application status. In addition, students. when prospective students could not be Human Resources: admitted into a programme applied for, a Empowering Managers firm second choice offer was made as an In an effort to align the Campus’s human indication of the Campus’s commitment to resources strategies with the University’s the student. Strategic Plan 2007/17, the Campus placed Admissions also strengthened its greater emphasis on its human resources communication tools introducing technology development function and its capacity to into additional areas of its operations, support the strategic approach. including its records system with applicants During the prior review period, the Campus receiving automated emails in response to had appointed a Director of Human submission of transcripts and such similar Resources to drive this initiative and gains documents. This was successful in achieving continued to be realized in this area. The the goals of increased efficiency and brought Campus set out a strategy to empower its significant cost reductions. managers by providing training in the areas During the review period, the Postgraduate of strategic human resources management, Section undertook the major project of leadership, career management and talent completely revamping its website providing management, employee engagement and increased levels of information for students The Employment Rights Act. and significantly enhancing user friendliness. As part of a University-wide initiative driven The website, which also took into by the Strategic Plan, the Campus continued The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 28 A D M I N I S T R AT I V E T R A N S F O R M AT I O N Campus Safety and Health Committee Back row from left: Mr Justin Sue, Mrs Nicole Sue (Health and Safety Officer), Mrs Geniveve Harris, Mrs Veronica Jones, Mr Martin Warrington, Mr Andre Demendonca Front row: Mrs Sandra Vaughn, Mr Orlando Alleyne Missing are Ms Sandra Grant and Mr Oral Reid its programme of coaching and sharing the Campus management, staff unions and information on employee engagement with the Ministry of Labour. Faculties and Departments in their meetings The training of Department Safety Officers as well as during training programmes had continued with a large percentage for all staff. The operational plans for the participating in sessions on the Safety and department were finalized and the Human Health at Work Act, Health and Safety Resources Strategic Initiative Dashboard Management on Campus and Evacuation developed. In order to monitor the procedures. These sessions were facilitated activities of Human Resources two sets of by the Ministry of Labour, the Campus metrics were being develop in Training and Health, Safety and Environmental Officer Development and Absence Management. and the Director of Campus Security. The development of emergency evacuation Creating A Healthy and Safe Learning procedures and the education of staff on and Work Environment evacuation preparation and response also received attention. A number of emergency During the review period, Administration exercises were conducted which gave continued to enhance its safety and health members of the community the opportunity programme towards ensuring that the to become familiar with the evacuation campus provided a supportive learning and processes. work environment. In the effort to ensure healthy environs The Campus Safety and Health Committee Administration continued to partner continued its work during the review period with the staff of the Vector Control Unit, and revised key areas of its remit in keeping Ministry of Health. Staff training was with evolving trends in the field. This effort determined to be a key component of included an official re-launch of the body in this programme with three vector control a ceremony attended by representatives of workshops being mounted. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 29 Partnerships with the Ministry of Health Archives Administration: also played an important role as the Campus WEBGENCAT commenced its immunization programme, The West Indies Federal Archives Centre/ vaccinating the “health care workers” staff Cave Hill Campus also benefitted from category with the assistance of officials from improved technologies namely the utilization the Brandford Taitt Polyclinic. of WebGencat for accessioning, researcher registration, arrangement and description and search and retrieval of archival holdings. New Initiatives in Record Management The database, which may be searched via The Registry Records Services continued the Archives’ website, is accessible globally. to administer the HP TRIM Electronic Under the system, researchers are issued Document and Records Management barcoded reader cards which enable an System (EDRMS) during the review audit trail of their usage. The website also period and worked towards deployment facilitates access to the Federal photographic of the new upgrade HP Records collection as well as to video clips of Manager which was introduced with interviews conducted as part of the Federal the enhancement of computer systems Oral History Project and related videos. across Administration. The second phase of implementation began with a pilot extension of the system to the Supporting Teaching, Learning Faculty of Law Office. This initiative, and Research which included training of personnel and During the academic year the West International installation of HP Records Manager to Council on Indies Federal Archives Centre/Cave Hill Archives – Section computers, would allow the Faculty to Campus Archives continued to make on University more efficiently manage administrative and Research input into teaching, learning and research Institution Archives and student records. with its support to the Heritage Studies Conference. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 30 A D M I N I S T R AT I V E T R A N S F O R M AT I O N and Integration Studies postgraduate The year ended with a well-attended programmes and the Certificate and “thank you ceremony” involving staff, Records Management Programme (CRM). retirees and friends of the University in Over two hundred local and regional which the Principal took the opportunity to students have graduated from the present awards to representatives of those CRM during the last ten years. “behind-the-scenes” Departments that had contributed so significantly to the success of Outreach the celebrations. The Archives continued to conduct annual community workshops and public lectures. In June 2013, the West Indies USING ICT TO SUPPORT Federal Archives Centre and the Centre TEACHING, LEARNING of Archive and Information Studies (CAIS) AND RESEARCH of the University of Dundee conducted a joint training initiative in the form of a Pre- A primary objective during the period Conference Training Workshop from 23 of review was to ensure that the Cave to 25 June, 2013. This was followed by an Hill Campus’ network infrastructure was International Research Conference on the upgraded and expanded to provide access management of digital records and archives to every student, faculty, and staff member. from 26 June to 29 June 2013 attended Recent network upgrades in the entire by over seventy professionals from thirty Faculty of Science & Technology brought countries. the Campus closer to its goal of complete connectivity for all stakeholders. Pivotal Role in Commemorating During the last year, the Campus 50th Anniversary experienced a proliferation of mobile Administration played a pivotal role during devices and other data-enabled devices the Fiftieth Anniversary celebrations of that accessed the Internet over WiFi the Campus coordinating several of the connections. Faculty, staff and students are commemorative activities. These included a beginning to leverage these devices not number of inspiring events notably an Inter- only for Internet access but for teaching faith Thanksgiving Service which commenced and learning activities. To this end, the the year-long celebrations. There was Campus continued to roll out its wireless also a series of naming ceremonies infrastructure not only to external hotpots bringing together members of the UWI but to every classroom and seminar room. community including foundational members, To date, the Campus provides approximately students, staff and alumni in events which 250 Access Points (AP) which connect a built solidarity and strengthened UWI maximum of 3,500 concurrent wireless commitment to its enduring vision of users in any one day. To keep pace with Caribbean development. Administration also the always increasing demand for Internet assisted in co-ordinating the range of public services, the Campus successfully negotiated lectures and book launches and graduation an increase of its Internet capacity from activities which featured prominently in the 375MBps to 570MBps at no additional cost commemoration of this significant milestone. to the Campus. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 31 Technology improves examining a different strategy for Participants at Cross-Campus Collaboration providing access to institutionally-equipped Pre-Conference Training. computer labs. By leveraging the Bring The Campus is also in the process of Your Own Device (BYOD) trend, the enhancing its video and web conferring Campus is piloting the use of virtual labs. capabilities as a strategy to increase access These allow students to use their own and improve student outcomes. These devices to received information and access collaboration tools are being applied to institutional software. Students tend to teaching and learning in many instructional like this flexibility in access from anywhere formats – including face-to-face, blended, thus reducing the demand for specially or totally on-line. Utilizing technology, the created lab spaces. Campus has been involved in a number of pilot projects which demonstrate that students from other campuses can Campus IT Governance Strengthened participate in courses delivered at the During the period of review, the Campus’ Cave Hill Campus and vice versa. IT governance was strengthen with the implementation of a revised framework. Classroom Technology Upgraded These enhanced IT Governance practices Classroom technology received a much ensure that all IT initiatives contribute needed overhaul during the year. Many optimally to operational performance and of the older projectors were replaced that there is better alignment between IT or repaired during the academic year. and the Campus strategic goals. IT projects Efforts are continuing to outfit additional are selected on the basis of the Campus classroom with technology to meet Operational Plan and priorities. It becomes the increasing demand from faculty for more evident that the Campus is relying technology enriched teaching. In addition, heavily on IT to achieve business (including the computers in the Campus’ largest academic and research) outcomes. This is Computer Laboratory were replaced, particularly important in this challenging with new computers providing students financial environment where the Campus with the latest versions of software. At must achieve much more with no additional the same time, the Campus is currently resources. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 32 A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 Celebrating JANUARY 2013Mr Andrew Lewis Class of 1968 Our For his outstanding contribution to the UWI. Leaders FEBRUARY 2013 During the year, the Cave Hill Campus Ms Cheryl Corbin Class of 1985continued to bring to attention its In recognition of her pioneering distinguished sons and daughters through work as the first Forensic Scientist in Barbados. the Alumnus/a of the Month Award. This award was first started in 2008 with the intention of foregrounding our MARCH 2013 outstanding graduates who have brought Mr Vance Amory exceptional honour and prestige to the Class of 1973 On the occasion of his election for a University and the Campus through their second term as Premier of Nevis and in recognition of his contribution to exemplary personal and professional the social and economic development services to their Alma Mater and of Nevis. their local, regional and international community in a manner that renders APRIL 2013 them role models for our current students. Mrs Alix Boyd-Knight Class of 1988 In recognition of her work as an advocate for women’s and children’s rights, particularly victims of domestic abuse, and her contribution as the longest serving Speaker of the House of Assembly of Dominica. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 33 DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI HONOURED MAY 2013 AUGUST 2013 His Excellency Professor The Hon. Anthony Thomas Andrew Burgess Aquinas Carmona, SC Class of 1974 Class of 1981 For his outstanding contribution In recognition of his contribution to to the Faculty of Law and on criminal jurisprudence in Trinidad being appointed Justice of and Tobago and internationally, Appeal, of the Court of Appeal particular the prosecution of war of Barbados. crimes, and on the occasion of his nomination as President of Trinidad and Tobago. JUNE 2013 SEPTEMBER 2013 Dr The Hon Keith Mitchell Mrs Faith Marshall-Harris Class of 1971 Class of 1986 In recognition of his contribution as In recognition of her outstanding the longest serving Prime Minister contribution as a Magistrate of Grenada and on the occasion of advocating for children’s rights his election as Prime Minister for a and on becoming Barbados’ second term. Champion for children for UNICEF. JULY 2013 OCTOBER 2013 Ms Anoria Simmons Her Ladyship The Hon. Class of 1996 Dame Janice Pereira On receiving The UK Winner for Class of 1979 The Award of Teacher of the Year On receiving the prestigious honour in Primary School and for her of Dame Commander in the Order outstanding contribution to the of the British Empire and as the first education, where she has helped to female Chief Justice of the Eastern turn around and change children’s Caribbean Supreme Court. lives in a deprived neighbourhood in the UK. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 34 A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 Teaching and Learning The visiting team appointed by the Barbados Accreditation Council (BAC) to evaluate Cave Hill’s application for accreditation noted “that Cave Hill’s teaching and learning is effective in enabling outcomes and objectives to be achieved, and that there is clear capability to continue to do so through effective development of learning opportunities.” THE FACULTY OF post in Spanish remains vacant since both HUMANITIES AND candidates selected and the proxy declined EDUCATION the job offer. Heritage Studies Revised During the year, the Department of History THE SCHOOL OF and Philosophy completed the revision of EDUCATION (SOE) the Heritage Studies syllabus/programme and begun revising the MA Heritage Studies. SOE Engages in Major Restructuring The new MA programme included courses of Masters Programme in audio-visual and oral history, and the The School of Education continued to management of cultural heritage site. The restructure its Master’s programmes. Department has noted that registration The revision included increasing the in this programme has fallen and is closely number of core courses in each area of monitoring the situation. specialisation from three to five courses, and the provision of both quantitative and qualitative research methods courses in DEPARTMENT OF LANGUAGE, graduate programmes. LINGUISTICS AND LITERATURE One of the most important changes in New Appointments Strengthens the restructuring process has been the Department’s Programmes introduction of a modularize foundation The Department of Language, Linguistic and course. The course is designed to provide Literature was successful in filling several students with a platform to explore the vacant positions within the Department. relationships and influences between New appointees were: Dr Keisha Evans society and education. Graduate students and Dr Janice Jules in Linguistics, Dr Nicola will be provided with the opportunity to Hunte in Literatures in English, Mr Jason choose the theme of the 3 modules of the Seigel in Lexicography, Dr Desrine Bogle course as well as the subtopics in each of and Dr Helene Zamor in French. The the three modules. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 35 Dr David Berry, Teaching and Learning The SOE also began the process of Dean, Faculty developing following new areas of of Lawspecialisation: • Curriculum and Instructional Studies (instead of old offering: Curriculum Theory, Planning and Practice); • Educational Leadership (this change in name from Ed. Admin was approved by Faculty Board last year); • Psychology in Education (instead of old offering: Educational Psychology); • Language and Literacy Education; to online This transition has provided the • Education Evaluation (instead of old Faculty with more timely and detailed data offering: Testing, Measurement and on student assessments of the quality of Evaluation); teaching, tutorials, and other aspects of • Science and Technology Education; academic life. • Inclusive Education; • School Counselling; Law Standardises LL.M. Programmes • Social Context of Education; During Academic Year 2012-2013, the • Math Education; Faculty also commenced the standardising • Primary Education (with an Early all of its LL.M. course descriptions, including Childhood Education Strand). their methods of assessment. This project is on-going as the three Faculties of Law move towards the development of a common FACULTY OF LAW LL.M. programme. LL.B Course Descriptions Meet E-Learning a Hit with International Best Practice Masters Students During the review period, the Faculty of Law The Faculty receive overwhelmingly positive continued the revision all of its LL.B. course responses to its use of the eLearning descriptions in keeping with the regulations programme (Blackboard Collaborate). of Board of Undergraduate Studies. Dr Sylvia To date, with the exception of the LL.M. Henry, Instructional Development Specialist in Legislative Drafting most courses are led two workshops on April 16 and April primarily online. The latter programme 18, 2013 to assist Faculty members with the requires students to attend several short revision of their courses. Faculty expects residential sessions throughout the year, to that the revision of the course descriptions allow for face-to-face instruction in addition will satisfy international best practise criteria to their online lectures and tutorials. and will be both modern and student friendly. Law Faculty to participate in Single Virtual University Space Pilot Law Course Evaluations Online The Faculty of Law has volunteered The Faculty successfully transitioned its to participate in the pilot for the student evaluation of teaching from paper Single Virtual University Space (SVUS) The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 36 T E A C H I N G A N D L E A R N I N G programme. This programme encourages FACULTY OF MEDICAL cross-campus and non-campus teaching SCIENCES through online technologies. It is hoped that Ralph Carnegie Law Lecture Theatre New MPhil/PhD in Pharmacology will soon be outfitted with the relevant Programme Approved equipment to allow online teaching across During the year, a new MPhil/PhD campuses. Pharmacology programme was approved by the Board for Graduate Studies and LL.M. in Intellectual Property Law Research and expects to accept its first awaiting final approval students in January 2014. The Faculty In 2012/13, the Faculty received DM programmes continue to attract high provisional approval for a new LL.M. in quality applicants but acceptance is often Intellectual Property Law. The programme limited by the lack of designated training introduces six new courses which posts at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital and will be offered in conjunction with in the Ministry of Health. the World Intellectual Organisation (WIO). These courses include: intellectual property asset management, FACULTY OF SCIENCE international trade and intellectual AND TECHNOLOGY property law, the protection of marketing assets, the protection Depradine Receives Teaching and Dr Colin Depradine of technology assets, international Learning Champion Award is presented with the intellectual property law, and the ‘Teaching and Learning protection of creative assets. Final Dr Colin Depradine, Senior Lecturer in Championship Award’ approval of the programme is pending the Department of Computer Science, by Deputy Principal Professor Eudine minor amendments. The programme Mathematics and Physics, (now Dean, Barriteau while Mrs Pat also must be made compatible with the Faculty of Science and Technology) was Atherley and Dr Sylvia presented with a special Teaching and Henry look on. proposed University LL.M. Learning Champion Award by Deputy Principal Professor Barriteau during the opening ceremony of the Teaching and Technology Symposium and the launch of Teaching and Learning Week 2013. Coordinator of Teaching and Learning Week, Mrs Pat Atherley, noted that Dr Depradine had been an active supporter of the teaching and learning programme, that he was one of the first members of faculty to embrace the use of the e-learning course and learning management system and he had consistently sought to share his knowledge and experiences with colleagues through his participation in the Centre’s faculty development programmes. Dr Depradine has also been awarded the The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 37 Vice-Chancellor’s Award for Excellence and the inaugural Guardian General Award for SUPPORTING Excellence in Teaching. TEACHING Automation Technology Added to Electronic Portfolio AND As part of the modernization of its programme the Department of Computer Science, Mathematics and Physics added LEARNING the new electronics course, Automation Technology. This course strengthens the uring the year, the Learning applied side of the Electronics major by utilizing theory to solve real-world DResource Centre comprising the problems. For example, it focusses on the Educational Media Services (EMS) use of electronic control theory in the solution of applied automated problems and the Instructional Development such as automated traffic management and Unit (IDU) was renamed the Centre robotics. for Excellence in Teaching and Computer Science Learning. This rebranding followed the Revamps Curriculum recommendation from the Board for The discipline of Computer Science completed its Quality Assurance review Undergraduate Studies to have the in March 2013 and as a result completely name of the IDU across the University revamped the discipline’s curriculum during the summer, the first significant more accurately reflect the scope and change since the year 2001. The discipline significance of the work carried out by is scheduled to present the changes for the units. approval in the academic year 2013-2014. During the year, the services provided by New Sciences Courses the Centre for Excellence in Teaching and On-Stream Learning were restructured. The audio- The Department of Biological and visual library was transferred to the Main Chemical Sciences also revamped its level Library and the classroom technology I courses for the disciplines of Biology, services to the Campus IT services (CITS). Biochemistry, Ecology and Microbiology. The EMS retained responsibility for Five new 3-credit courses were introduced: multimedia production and the provision Introduction to Biochemistry, Diversity of Life I, of audio visual services. The restructured Diversity of Life II, Basic Skills for Biologists and Centre continues to focus on curriculum Introduction to Genetics. The Department and instructional development (IDU) and also developed a Basic Skills course which on technology enhancement of teaching and introduces students to the mathematics learning and providing access to modern needed for Biology and related disciplines. e-learning technologies. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 38 T E A C H I N G A N D L E A R N I N G CUTL Graduates 2013 L-R: Mrs Patricia Atherley, Dr Rajendra Maurya , Mr Westmin James, Dr Natasha Sobers- Grannum (back row), Dr Cheryl Alexis (middle row), Dr Cornelia Guell (back row), Dr Sylvia Henry , Dr Paul Walcott (back row), Ms Alana Malinde Lancaster, Dr Kimberley Baldwin. Curriculum Renewal and Support- templates and guides are assisting to Quality Assurance and Quality standardise the course and programme Control renewal process. In addition to delivering the Post-Graduate CUTL (PGCUTL), Dr Sylvia Henry, the Additionally, in order to standardise the Instructional Development Specialist design of graduate courses, the IDS prepared a draft course template and a course (IDS), continued to deliver a number of template guide to be utilised by persons workshops tailored to meet the need developing or revising courses for the of faculty members. During the year, School for Graduate Studies and Research. the IDS provided support in the form of These instruments were submitted to the workshops, seminars, individual and group School for Graduate Studies and Research. consultations, and curriculum materials. Of significance to the design and renewal During the reporting period, the IDS of courses and programmes, have been and the School for Graduate Studies the group sensitisation sessions available and Research were engaged in the to specific faculties. Additionally, over development of the course Research forty individual consultations have been Supervisor Development for graduate research conducted to share advice and provide supervisors. The course will included topics guidance on the writing of well-aligned such as: Overview of Graduate Supervision; learning outcomes; preparing examination Regulatory Frameworks, Regulations and items; and implementing and publishing Procedures; Characteristics of an Effective classroom action research. Supervisor; Building Blocks of Research; Dr Henry was also engaged in assisting to Addressing Diversity, Pitfalls and Challenges; revise and/or design over eighty courses Responsible Conduct, Code of Ethics; and programmes. This number is increasing Proposal Writing; and the Viva. It also steadily as lecturers seek to ensure that includes a face-to-face Lecturer/Student all courses and programmes meet BUS discussion forum and an online support guidelines and standards. Newly designed discussion facility for graduate supervisors. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 39 Participant/User Feedback on the • Responding to Plagiarism: Lesson Plans PGCUTL Programme and Strategies. During the review period, a survey • Developing Effective Academic Integrity undertaken by the Campus Quality Policies. Assurance Office, to determine the • Teaching Originality, Creativity and extent to which the skills learnt during the Critical Thinking. PGCUTL were being applied and to gauge general feedback from the graduates of • Training for Graduate Research Supervision. the programme indicated that the PGCUTL programme is “a good and worthwhile programme” and that the graduates have Teaching and Technology Symposium seen the benefits of undertaking such During the period under review, the a programme. The survey results also EMS held its third annual Teaching and indicated that to some extent graduates Technology sponsored by LIME Barbados. have been applying all of the skills they have The Symposium was officially opened by gained. The graduates reported that the the Deputy Principal Professor Eudine relevance of the programmes made the skills Barriteau while Mrs relatively easy to apply new knowledge, Carolyn Williams- but that workload and lack of time were Gayle Corporate inhibiting factors at times. A strong Communications and recommendation was made for refresher Public Relations Manager training for graduates of the programme. of LIME delivered remarks on behalf of the sponsors. The feature address EMS Hosts Webinar on Plagiarism entitled “The Teacher as Education /Academic Integrity Leader” was delivered by During Plagiarism Education Week, April 22- Prof. Jay Caulfield. The 26, 2013, Mrs Patricia Atherley, promoted symposium was attended and hosted a series of webinars on the by 45 persons, including theme of academic integrity. Following representatives from the webinars faculty engaged in animated sister tertiary institutions discussion on factors contributing to and the Media Resources Mrs Carolyn plagiarism and the need to broaden the Department of the Ministry of Education, Williams-Gayle of LIME, sponsors of debate and initiatives in the academy, from a Science, Technology and Innovation. the 2013 Teaching focus on plagiarism detection and determent Presentations were delivered by: and Technology to the creation of a culture of academic Symposium, • Ms Tara J. Wilkinson-McClean and addresses honesty and integrity. Topics in the series Dr Ian Craig, Department of Language, participants included: Linguistics and Literature on Promoting at the opening ceremony. • Causes of plagiarism - Exploring the Digital Media Literacy: Lessons Learned Disconnect Between Morals and Behaviour. from Teaching Language & Media in the Caribbean. • Types of plagiarism - Plagiarism Spectrum Drill Down. • Mrs Tara A. Chase, Department of Management Studies on Using Student The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 40 T E A C H I N G A N D L E A R N I N G Feedback to Develop the Right ‘Blend’ for Teaching and Technology Summer the Delivery of MKTG3010: Integrated Institute on Blended Learning-Teaching Marketing Communications. and Learning Week Celebrated • Dr Paul Walcott, Department of Computer Science, Mathematics The Centre for Excellence in Teaching and and Physics on PowerPoint Possibilities: Learning’s contribution to the Campus’s Unleashing the Power of PowerPoint in 50th Anniversary celebrations was a series Tertiary Classrooms. of activities held during June 17-21, 2013. The week was designated as Teaching and • Dr Desiree Skeete, Faculty Learning Week, with the theme “Rethink, of Medical Sciences on A Blended Reassess, Redesign”. Highlights included the Approach to Undergraduate Anatomical annual Teaching and Technology Symposium; Pathology Teaching and Learning: the Teaching and Technology Summer Institute; Improving Student Engagement at the a seminar/workshop on Action Research Hospital. and Writing for Publication; and presentation Dr Paul Walcott • Dr Leah D. Garner-O’Neale, of a special Teaching and Learning Champion Department of Biological and Award. Chemical Sciences on Utilization of From June 18-20, the EMS hosted the fourth Discussion Forums – Adding Authenticity annual Teaching and Technology Institute under to Chemistry Courses through Blended the theme of Blended Learning. This was one Learning. of the initiatives to support the strategic goal • Dr Grace Fayombo, School of of flexible learning articulated in the Strategic Education on Technology Infused Plan, and the strategic objective to “enable Learner-Centred Strategies: Tools for technology solutions for teaching, learning Promoting Students’ Engagement and and research.” This institute was the first Learning Outcomes in Psychology; and by in a planned series of initiatives on blended • Dr Helene Zamor, Department of learning which will include the establishment Language, Linguistics and Literature on of a blended learning research group at the An Assessment of On-Line Resources and Campus. Technological Tools in Teaching French as The Summer Institute on Blended Learning a Foreign Language. was led by Prof. Jay Caulfield of Marquette • Dr Akhentoolove Corbin, Department University, Wisconsin. Prof. Caulfield is a of Management Studies on An former member of the faculty development Examination of Undergraduate Students’ team in the Learning Technology Center Preferences for Teaching Strategies and at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Styles Utilized By Lecturers. and one of the architects of the Centre’s well known faculty development programme Participants spoke highly of the experience for blended course redesign. Forty-three with suggestions that the symposium be persons attended the Summer Institute and extended to two days, and that members final evaluations indicated that it was very of other tertiary institutions be invited well received. Prof Caulfield also offered to make presentations. Video recordings opportunities for individual consultations to of the presentations will be available to discuss course redesign ideas. faculty via the EMS YouTube channel. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 41 Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Principal, Professor Sir Hilary Beckles and Her Excellency Senator Kerryann Ifill, President of the Senate of Barbados, at the opening of the Kerryann Ifill Unit. THE MAIN LIBRARY collection have been reproduced, framed and hung. The collection is well used by Kerryann Ifill Unit Opens students and staff. In its continued support of the Campus’ strategic objective to improve its service to the differently abled the Main Library THE LAW LIBRARY opened the Kerryann Ifill unit in May 2013 The remodeled and outfitted space provides UWI/UNICEF Childrens state-of-the-art technology for the visually Law Database challenged to access library materials. The The official launch of the Children’s Law unit was named in honour of Her Excellency, Database was held on Monday March 18 President of the Senate of Barbados, Senator in the conference room of the CARICOM Kerryann Ifill, the first blind student to Building. The Dean of the Faculty of Law graduate from Cave Hill. gave welcoming remarks while the UNICEF representative for the region spoke on the George Lamming Collection importance of the database. Senator, the The Library was pleased to receive the Hon. Professor Velma Newton, Project major part of George Lamming’s library Coordinator, provided an outline of the during the year. In addition to books, Mr work done on the project. The database Lamming also donated a number of artifacts has proven to be very useful to researchers including a portable Olivetti typewriter, throughout the region as they seek to awards, medals and other personal objects. improve legislation relating to the rights Images from Mr Lamming’s personal of children. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 42 A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 Research and Development Faculty of Medical Sciences • Increase the pool of legislative drafters. Institutes New Initiatives • Increase access to alternative dispute To Support Research resolution, restorative justice and community peace-building mechanisms. During the academic year under review, • Improve access by the legal profession the Faculty of Medical Sciences instituted and the public to legislation, case law two new initiatives for supporting the and legal information. development of research. In January, the • Strengthen the accountability framework Faculty held its first annual PhD symposium, and skills of the legal profession in at which all PhD and MPhil students were CARICOM Member States. encouraged to present papers. This event The Project proposal has been discussed at was well-attended and included some several levels within CIDA and is expected excellent presentations and discussion on to be finalised in the 2013-14 academic year. current research. It has been agreed that in the future all postgraduate research students will be expected to present. Shridath Ramphal Centre The Faculty has also established a monthly, Participates in South-South research update and journal club which is Mobility Project open to all Faculty members. This forum provides a useful space for seeking feedback The Shridath Ramphal Centre assisted on research in progress, from nascent idea the ACP Observatory on Migration with to initial results, and to discussing potential the coordination and dissemination of research topics of local relevance. the findings of a study on South-South Mobility in the Caribbean region. The study started in May 2012 and the ACP CLIC Finalises Improved Access Observatory provided technical support to Justice in the Caribbean and allocated funds to deliver the findings. (IMPAC) Project The objectives of the study were: to assess and gather existing data on intra- Caribbean Law Institute Centre regional land South-South movements in (CLIC) and the Canadian International the Caribbean region through literature Development Agency (CIDA) continued review and an online questionnaire with to fine-tune the IMPAC Project proposal policy-makers and a short household forwarded by CLIC on behalf of the survey with migrants; provide the precise Faculty of Law. data on stocks, flows and demographic The Project seeks to: traits of South-South immigrants and Senator the Hon • Support CARICOM Member States in emigrants in the region and to foster a Professor Velma Newton, Officer-in- the formulation of model laws at the learning process on how South-South Charge, CLIC regional level and new or amended laws mobility and development research can be at the national level. a valuable tool for policy makers. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 43 Research and Development Cermes Hosts Sustainable Caribbean rainfall variability. Water Management Project The focus of the research is Inception Meeting now on determining if there is a threshold in the Sea Surface On March 26 and 27, 2013, CERMES Temperature (SST) gradient hosted the inception meeting for the that will trigger the increase or International Development Research decrease of rainfall amounts at Centre (IDRC), Canada funded Sustainable particular times during the year. Water Management under Climate Change This analysis is based on both in Small Island States of the Caribbean climatological methods and on Project. The meeting was attended by a new statistical approach being representatives from partner organisations developed at Cave Hill. Dr Isabelle Gouirand around the region. Dr Gouirand collaborates with Dr Michael Taylor, Mona Campus with whom she shares a US$5,000 grant, received Scientist Focusses on in summer 2013, from the UWI-SUNY Climate Change initiative to set up collaboration with Albany New York University for research Dr Isabelle Gouirand’s research during on Caribbean rainfall variability and the last 2 years focussed on examining climate change. the relationship between the two types of El Nino Southern Oscillation events and the Caribbean rainfall. The results of this Pilot Study on Education and research have been published in Climate Teen Sexuality Dynamics (Gouirand et al. 2013). This publication pointed out the relationships Education and Teen Sexuality in Barbados between the Caribbean rainfall rainy season a Gender Perspective project began with and the Cold tongue ENSO and West a pilot study in January 2012. The project Pacific ENSO. This paper was presented at was completed in July 2012 and Principal the American Geophysical Union in Cancun Investigator, Research Assistant, Dr Carmen (May 13-17, 2013) and at the Climate Change Hutchinson Miller and Graduate Student Congress Cuba (July 2013) where she was and Intern Ms Fatimah Jackson presented invited by the Instituto de Meteorologia the results on November 6, 2012, and May (INSMET) and by the Caribbean Community 21, 2013. A Working Paper of the findings is Climate Change Centre (5Cs) groups, being prepared. respectively. In these meetings, Dr The Unit also developed a concept paper Gouirand pointed out the importance of on the Changing Gender Relations in the 21st identifying the mechanisms involved in the Century Caribbean Project (Formerly Women in Caribbean rainfall variability to increase the the Caribbean Project 2 (WICP 2). The project accuracy of the climate model prediction. seeks to compare the roles and positions Dr Gouirand is also contributing to the of contemporary Caribbean women over a climate modeller group by enhancing the three-year period. Professor Eudine Barriteau understanding of the large scale interactions and Dr Halimah DeShong are the leading and the air-sea mechanisms involved in the investigators of this project. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 44 R E S E A R C H A N D D E V E L O P M E N T Sexual Violence in The Eastern Sexuality, Risk and Vulnerability Caribbean: A Girl-Led Initiative among University Students in Barbados: Phase 2 The IGDS:NBU is embarking on a collaborative regional action research During the year, UWIHARP entered into the project to address the problem of sexual qualitative phase of an ongoing assessment violence against women in the Eastern of sexual attitudes, behaviours, risks, Caribbean. The project seeks to engage and vulnerabilities of Cave Hill students young women and girls as leaders in their undertaken with financial support from the communities in addressing the problem World Bank. of sexual violence, and to evaluate and address the current responses to this issue. The project will be conducted in Research Ethics Committee/ Dominica, Grenada, St. Vincent and the Institutional Review Board Grenadines and St. Lucia. Among the areas to be assessed and addressed as part of During the year, the Research Ethics this project are advocacy, media, legislation, Committee (REC) Cave Hill Campus reviewed policy, social service provision, education and approved 58 projects. The REC jointly and empowerment. There is a special focus serves the Cave Hill Campus and the Ministry on youth and peer education around the of Health (MoH) Barbados. Additionally, issues of sexual and psychological safety, the REC reviews research projects from sexual violence, and support services. neighbouring nations if requested. In addition to review of human participant research, Dr Michael Campbell, Chair of IGDS: Nita Barrow Unit the REC conducted a number of education Develops Funding Proposals and outreach activities each year. Projects On Women And Violence approved during 2012/13 included: 1. A mixed methods study to determine how Dr Tonya Haynes secured US$5,000.00 in the Diabetes Association of Barbados can funding from the Association for Women’s better meet the needs of its members. Rights in Development (AWID) Innovation 2. A new technique for the removal of Seed Grant for curriculum development pterygiums. for a CIGAD participant from Haiti. Drs. 3. A retrospective clinical audit for the Halimah DeShong and Tonya Haynes congenital malformations among newborns submitted a funding application to the at the QEH. United Nation Trust Fund to End Violence 4. Adapting an evidence-based drug and Against Women, for the project “Girls Lead: violence program for Caribbean youth. Ending Violence Against Women in the 5. Adult-group attachment dyads Moderated Eastern Caribbean”. by age, gender, and culture. Dr Charmaine Crawford submitted a 6. An Investigation into Readiness for proposal entitled “Hidden Bruises: HIV and Self-Directed Learning Among Pre-clinical Violence in the Caribbean” to the National Students in the MBBS Program at the HIV/AIDS Commission of Barbados. Cave Hill Campus, University of the West Indies. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 45 7. Analysis and evaluation of policy Funding Research initiatives aimed at prevention and control of chronic diseases in During the Academic Year 2012/13, the Barbados. Campus awarded a total of BD$458,510.338 8. Attitudes towards persons with to 52 postgraduate students to support autistic disorder. field research, purchase supplies and for 9. Household-centered Approaches travel to make presentations at regional for Stormwater Management in and international conferences (Table 1). In Caribbean Islands. additional 24 members of the academic staff received a total of BD$195,338 to support research and publications activities (Table 2). Table 1: Research Awards to Post Graduate Students 2012/13 Conference Total Research Number of Faculty/Unit Participation BD$ BD$ Awards BD$ Humanities and Education 90,532.64 72,281.68 18,250.96 12 Medical Sciences 22,894.82 17,230.82 7,664.00 3 Law 324.32 324.32 1 Science and Technology 230,516.26 222,310.39 8,205.87 19 Social Sciences 52,243.04 20,320.04 31,923.00 9 CERMES 49,607.85 35,558.35 14,049.50 5 IGDS:NBU 8,769.78 2,918.92 5,850.86 2 SALISES 1,621.62 1,621.62 - 1 TOTAL 458,510.33 372,566.06 85,944.19 52 Table 2: Research and Publication Awards to Academic Staff 2012/13 Conference Total Research Publication Number of Faculty/unit Participation Travel BD$ BD$ BD$ Awards BD$ Humanities and Education 39,368.00 - 19,000.00 20,368.00 - 8 Medical Sciences 26,300.00 26,300.00 - - - 2 Law 10,800.00 10,800.00 1 Science and Technology 85,370.00 84,895.00 475.00 - 7 Social Sciences 30,980.00 18,980.00 3,000.00 4,000.00 5,000.00 5 SALISES 2,520.00 - - 2,520.00 - 1 TOTAL 195,338.00 130,175.00 32,800.00 27,363.00 5,000.00 24 The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 46 A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 Cave Hill @50 50th Anniversary Launch and the InterFaith Thanksgiving Service: The Honourable Ronald Jones, Minister of Education, Science, Technology and Innovation unveiling the 50th Anniversary Logo while Deputy Principal Professor Eudine Barriteau and Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Principal Professor Sir Hilary Beckles look on. Mr Damian Belgrave, President of the Guild of Students, carries the Mace into the St Mary Anglican Church at the start of the Interfaith Church Service. Campus Registrar Sir Hilary presents Dr Altman with “Cave Hill @50 Mrs Jacqueline Path to Prosperity”, a collection of speeches edited by Wade leads Sir Hilary Beckles. Academic Procession at the Interfaith Church Quaw’s Quest Service held on February, 17, 2013. Quaw’s Quest named in memory of Quaw a 37 year-old man from “Guinea” whose personal quest for freedom, education, enfranchisement, Professor Maria Elisa family life, and social respect, typified Velaquez Gutierrez, the collective aspiration of the 295 Chair Unesco Slave Route persons enslaved on properties that Project. Mr Damian now constitute the Cave Hill Campus Belgrave, Professor space. The names of all these Sir Hilary Beckles and persons are inscribed on tablets the Most Rev Dr the located in a garden space dedicate to Hon John W.D. Holder their memory. examining the tablets. Dr Sandra Richards presents libations at the Unveiling of Quaw’s Quest on March 15, 2013. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 47   Taking center stage during the year was series of inaugural Professorial Lectures. The following persons delivered Professorial lectures during the period under review:  Professor Welch - “Praxis and Practice: Tracking Medical Practice in the 18th and 19th  Century Caribbean” on March 26, 2012;  Professor Jane Bryce - “Who no Know, Go Know: New Directions in African Film and Fiction” on April A major event in honour 20, 2013 and  Professor Curwen Best - “10 Things The of the 50th Anniversary Youth Know (that we don’t) was series of public about Cyberspace, Our lectures which analysed Nations and the Future” on May 14, 2013. the history, development and social context of the Cave Hill Campus over 50th Anniversary the last 50 years. Public Lectures    Presenting these lectures were   Professor Sir Woodville Marshall,  Sir Keith Hunte,  Professor Sir Hilary Beckles and  Professor Eudine Barriteau. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 48 A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 Student News Annual Student Young Entrepreneurs Benefit Award Ceremony from Business Plan Competition The Annual Student Awards Ceremony For a third year, CIBC FirstCaribbean took place on Tuesday, April 02, 2013 under International Bank, through its the theme: “Championing Excellence: Path Business Pan Competition, provided an to Prosperity”. Highlights of the ceremony opportunity through which graduates included the feature address by Ms Keeley of the Campus Student Entrepreneurial Holder, UWI Cave Hill Alumni and Empowerment Development (SEED) Ms Keeley Holder Agricultural Entrepreneur and a calypso programme gained funding for their delivering the feature rendered by Ms Cherise Francis depicting fledging businesses.address at the 2013 Student Awards significant achievements of the Cave Hill First place in the bank-sponsored Ceremony. Campus over the last 50 years. competition went to Freedom 5, a clothing company focusing on wholesome and stylish apparel and accessories while Chrisy’s Care, a day care and pre-school for children with special needs ranging in age from six weeks to five year placed second. Cube, a socially-aware concept with a unique business model which focussed on the use of renewable energy sources and Advanced Software Engineering Solutions, providing cost- effective technology solutions including websites and mobile applications tied for third position, SoShine, an entertainment company which uses the online medium to reach customers took the fourth place Since the start up of the Competition in 2011, many of the programme’s finalist have gone on to reap further successes with the funding, mentorship and education provided by the SEED Programme. 2011 winner Shamkoe Pile is arguably the most notable with her thriving business operation Skai Multimedia which has won considerable The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 49 local acclaim. David Michael, 3rd place in 2011 has successfully printed his first edition of his magazine Echoes Caribbean. Jason Hope’s Bajan Art Inc. was commissioned to design a monument for the UWI Alumni, Cave Hill as part of the Campus’ 50th Anniversary and last year’s winners Bookline have since gone on to win the Social Entrepreneurship category of the Caribbean Innovation Challenge and UNDP funded initiative under Youth-IN. Cave Hill Continues to Shine at International Mootings highest score in the entire competition for a L-R: Mr Corey Memorial. The team was also the recipient Greenidge, Ms Shenea As a result of the generosity of several of the Best Team of the Competition award. Cunningham institutions and prominent Attorneys-at- and Mr Odwin Law, the Faculty of Law was able to continue Trenton.Inter-American Court of Human Rights to mount the International Mooting course Moot Court Competition, Washington during the year and to send students to the DC, May 19-24, 2013. The Cave Hill team following international competitions: comprised of Stephanie Ewbank and Inter-American Sustainable Development Andre Bascoe did extremely well in this Moot Court Competition, Bogota traditionally Latin dominated Competition. Colombia, March 6-9, 2013, Inter-American The Cave Hill team advanced to the Sustainable Development Moot Court semi-finals and placed third overall in the Competition is trilingual competition in Competition. This was the highest placing of which students argue in Spanish, Portuguese an English team in the Competition this year. and English. Over 21 teams of students The team was also the recipient of the Best representing law schools and law faculties Memorial in English and Stephanie Ewbank spanning the entire region of the Americas was awarded the Best Oralist in English. The and the Caribbean participated in this year’s team’s memorial had the 3rd highest mark competition. This year’s moot case dealt and Stephanie obtained the 2nd highest with the human rights of indigenous peoples oralist score among all the 200 oralists. under the American Convention of Human Rights and other issues including intellectual Caribbean Court of Justice Moot Court property, sustainable development and Competition March 14-15, 2013 international law. Participating for the first This Competition is organised by the time the UWI Cave Hill team consisted Caribbean Court of Justice to promote of Corey Greenidge, Odwin Trenton and the original jurisdiction of the Court. This Shenea Cunningham. The team placed third year the facts involved the free movement in the Competition and was the recipient of capital. The UWI Cave Hill team was of the Best Memorial for the State with the represented by Jeffrey Foreman, Malike The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 50 S T U D E N T N E W S Kellier and Roxanne Désirée Bernard, the Honourable Mr Ffrench. The team won Justice Jacob Wit, the Honourable Mr its match against UWI St. Justice David Hayton and the Honourable Augustine Campus but did Mr Justice Winston Anderson. not advance to the finals. Faculty members and students engaged The teams were coached in animated discussion. The programme by Mr Westmin James, the was introduced by the Dr David Berry, course director. Dean of the Faculty of Law and the vote of thanks was given by the President of the Law Society, Mr Azard AJA Gumbs. Law Revives The event was a tremendous success and a Students’ third Conversation is expected next year. Trust Fund The Honourable EMS Provides Internship Mr Justice As result of a contribution by Professor Opportunities for Students Winston Keith Patchett, former Dean of Law, during Anderson During the year under review, the the year, the Faculty of Law revived the EMS continued to provide internship Students’ Trust Fund – Law, which was opportunities for students. The unit first established in July 2007. The Faculty to hosted two Film majors from the Errol was able to award three bursaries, of Barrow Centre for Creative Imagination BDS$3,000 each, payable towards University (EBCCI) and one Computer Science fees and tuition to students registered in major from the Faculty of Science and the Faculty’s full-time LL.B. programme. Technology as Student Assistants. The The main criteria were Film students developed their videography (1) demonstrated financial need, and skills even as they contributed significantly (2) exhaustion of all other funding to the multimedia production services possibilities. Academic standing also was offered by the unit. The Computer Science taken into consideration. The Faculty will major assisted the unit in the ongoing be seeking additional funding to offer the development of its YouTube channel. Students’ Trust Fund – Law again in the 2013-14 academic year. Conversations with the Caribbean SPORTS CAVE HILL Court of Justice: 2 On March 19, 2013, the Faculty of Law Cave Hill Dominates Barbados held its second ‘Conversations’ with the Cricket Association (BCA) cricket seven judges of the Caribbean Court competitions of Justice’, who were in Barbados for The Sagicor UWI cricket squad captured hearings in the case of Shanique Myrie all three (3) major cricket titles available v. Barbados. The Right Honourable Sir in the 2012 Barbados Cricket Association Charles Michael Dennis Byron, President, (BCA) cricket championship. It was the first the Honourable Mr Justice Rolston time in the 100 year history of the BCA Nelson, the Honourable Mr Justice Adrian competition that one team was crowned Saunders, the Honourable Mme Justice champions in all three formats. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 51 The dominance of the UWI team was Competition in July 2013. Those players highlighted in the fact that UWI won 95% were Shakera Selman, Malissa Howard, of their matches played and suffered only Aneka White and Rechelle Griffith. one defeat in the entire season. Ms Selman captained the Barbados’ The UWI squad completed their fantastic team and also played in Sri Lanka as season in December 2012 when the Cave a regular representative of the West Hill based squad won the BCA 20/20 Indies in the world 20/20 championship. competition. This followed the BCA Elite 3 Day Division – (their fourth (4th) consecutive Players Justin Catlin, Ché Warner, Shavonne cricket title) and BCA 50 over competition. Goddard and Kamar Bovell were selected to represent Barbados in the Junior Pan Mr Omar Phillips (Elite 3 Day) and American Hockey Under-21 competition UWI Blackbirds Mr Kyle Corbin (50 over and 20/20) had held in Guadalajara, Mexico, September Netball 2012 the distinction of captaining the UWI teams 10-23, 2012. Mr Warner, finished 5th in the Division 2 Champions ‘top goal scorers’ ranking, in Junior Panama Standing during the season. Among the BCA ‘Five (from left to right): Cricketers of the Year Award’ were two Games and completed the tournament Nikita Wickham, Paula Babb, UWI players: Mr Akeem Dewar and with a tally of 9 goals, 6 short of the top Shodia Holder-Dash, Mr Jonathan Carter. ranked Gonzalo Peillat from Argentina. Mechelle Liburd, Shakira Springer, Alicia Harding, In the BCA Elite 3 day competition, Jamaican The UWI Blackbirds Netball team was Blondel Hurley, student Mr Akeem Dewar and Barbadian crowned the 2012 Divisions 2 and 5 Monique James. Mr Jonathan Carter emerged as the leading Champions of the Barbados Netball Front wicket-taker and batsman respectively. Associations (BNA) league. Under the (from left to right): leadership of Coach Margaret Cutting, Jehlesal Brathwaite, the team has shown great progress from Teresa Howell, The members of the historic Erica Osbourne, year to year as they demonstrated the UWI squad were: Tyna King, dominance of the University’s netball team. Giselle Burke. Kyle Corbin (captain), Omar Phillips (captain), Floyd Reifer (player/coach), Anthony Alleyne, Ryan Austin, Carlos Brathwaite, Amani Best, Karran Bhola, Jonathan Carter, Marques Clarke, Romel Currency, Derone Davis, Akeem Dewar, Cyprian Forsyth, Kavem Hodge, Steven Jacobs, Kevin McClean, Mario Miller, Yannick Ottley, Nekoli Parris, Samuel Peters, Steve Pinder, Raymon Reifer, Liam Sebastian, Shacaya Thomas, Chadwick Walton, Kesrick Williams and Nhamo Winn. Blackbirds Selected for Regional and International Duty Four (4) members of the UWI Blackbirds women’s cricket team were selected to represent Barbados in the Regional Cricket The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 52 S T U D E N T N E W S VISION AND FORTITUDE catering to vulnerable persons. Students HEIGHTENS SOCIAL provided service through social programmes CONSCIOUSNESS such the feeding programme at the Salvation Army, the First Aid Programme at St. John’s During the year the Vision and Fortitude Ambulance Brigade. programme continued to provide students with personal development opportunities ‘Creative Minds’ School and service learning experiences. Students Outreach Project reported that the Vision and Fortitude In addition, thirty-eight (38) students programme helped to develop their got an opportunity to enhance their interpersonal skills and a greater sensitivity organizational, leadership, public speaking, to the needs of persons with disabilities. teaching and creative skills through the Overall, they assessed the programme as “Creative Minds” School Outreach Project” having heightened their social consciousness which delivering value-based education to and their desire to give back to their primary school students. communities. Braille Classes Programme activities included: Thirty-nine (39) students took Braille classes which included practical instruction Conscious Vibrations in reading and writing braille and mobility Twenty-six (26) students attended training. Students were also provided with “Conscious Vibrations which involved in information on causes of visual impairment thought-provoking and reflective discussions and eye care. during which they explored value systems, creative expressions and civic responsibility Peer Education Activities through topics such as “Turn up the Love: The student association, UWIHARP Selfless Service in a Selfish Society”. Cave Hill Association of Peer Training, Students leaders Education and Outreach (CHAPTER) participated in a Service Learning Experiences implemented a series of student-centred three-day training Forty-seven (47) students participated in programme to HIV and sexual and reproductive health the Service Learning Experiences that included develop basic outreach activities during the academic helping skills. visits to institutions and social agencies year 2012-2013. These activities took place under the guidance and support of the UWIHARP Office and included participation in guild-based activities, formal and informal direct outreach to students, and support of staff-initiated programmes. These activities included: CHAPTER Week of Activities entitled “50 Shades of Red…Response. Education, Discussion” which encompassed: a cake sale, HIV display in the main library and book shop, HIV outreach on the two Halls of Residence, and the launch of the UWIHARP “Love Quilt” in February 2013. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 53 Outreach SOE Delivers Development Workshops for Educators During 2012/13 the School of Education (SOE) delivered two professional development institutes for principals and other educational leaders. In the summer of 2012 SOE held the Educators’ Summer Leadership Institute (ESLI) in which 29 educators participated. In April of 2013, in collaboration with the Ministry of Education, Science, Technology and Innovation, SOE coordinated the New Principals Academy of Leadership, providing professional development training to the largest cohort of principals hired in one time period by the Department of History and Participants in the Management Ministry. Forty-one educators participated Philosophy Participates in of Caribbean in this week-long training. Cultural Management Training Cultural Resources in a Natural Environment The Department of History and training course. Department Delivers Philosophy in collaboration with the Public Lecture Series UNESCO Offices in Havana and Kingston and UNESCO’s World Heritage Centre, On Thursday November 15, 2012 the the Barbados National Commission for Department of History and Philosophy UNESCO, offered the training course hosted a public lecture entitled Where to The Management of Caribbean Cultural look for your body to mark UNESCO Resources in a Natural Environment: Sites World Philosophy Day. The lecture was of Memory and Participation of Local delivered by Professor Shaun Gallagher of Communities from March 11-15, 2013. The the University of Memphis, USA, at the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science Cave Hill Campus. of the Netherlands funded the event. During March – May 2013, the Department The workshop aimed at strengthening joined with the Barbados Museum and capacities in the management of cultural Historical Society, the National Cultural resources in a natural environment. Foundation and the Central Bank of Particular attention was paid to the Barbados to host a very successful public Caribbean Sites of Memory with special lecture series The Emancipation Project: emphasis on nomination processes to 1838-1937. The lecturers were all members the World Heritage List, by considering of staff or graduates of Cave Hill’s History case studies from St Vincent and the programme. Grenadines, Grenada and Jamaica. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 54 O U T R E A C H Department of Language, Caribbean Commercial Law Linguistics and Literature Hosts Workshop On-stream Symposium on Carpentier After a four year, hiatus the Caribbean The CAFÉ Project’s Art Exhibition and Commercial Law Workshop (CCLW) Symposium was successfully hosted in was successfully held at the Loews Miami conjunction with the Cuban Embassy in Beach Hotel, Florida during the period Barbados, between October 22 and 27. Also August 18-20, 2013. Under the theme in association with the Cuban Embassy, the Caribbean Law in Times of Austerity the Department hosted a symposium on March workshop focussed on the global financial 23 entitled “Carpentier in the Caribbean: crisis and its impact upon the legal and A Dialogue Among Cultures”, as well as an economic structures of the Caribbean. Art Exhibition on Carpentier. Papers covered a wide variety of themes Cuban novelist, including: tax law, financial services, Alejo Carpentier corruption, forensic accounting, rescue EBCCI Celebrates financing, project financing, capital financing, Heritage Month environmental law, energy law, corporate governance, CARICOM law, trade law, During June 2013, EBCCI collaborated with intellectual property, employment law, the Ministry of Culture, Sport and Youth human rights, and international arbitration. to present two activities in celebration Approximately eighty-six persons of Heritage Month. These included an art participated in the workshop which exhibition at the EBCCI Art Gallery from obtained Continuing Legal Professional June 8-17 which featured works held by Development approval from the Jamaica the National Art Gallery and the Barbados General Legal Counsel and Continuing Gallery of Art. A night of film screenings Legal Education Accreditation from the themed “Movie Night in the City” took Florida Bar Association. place on June 22 in Independence Square, Bridgetown and featured films produced by participants in the UNDP-EBCCI Youth-IN GSSW Hosts Panel Discussions project as well as those of Prof. Gladstone Yearwood. During the year, the Department of Government, Sociology and Social Work (GSSW) hosted two panel discussions. Imagine Youth Summer The first was held December 10, Arts Programme 2012, in collaboration with the Cuban Embassy in Barbados on “The Meaning & The annual summer arts programme Imagine Implications of Cuba-CARICOM Diplomatic Youth under the theme “What is Your Relations in the Current Global Politico- Imagination?” took place from July 8 to economic Environment.” This discussion August 11, 2012. In collaboration with the commemorated the 40th Anniversary of University of Trinidad and Tobago (UTT), a the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations new animation component was added to the between the Republic of Cuba and existing areas of film, dance and theatre. CARICOM. The second panel discussion The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 55 was held on April 18, 2013 on “Critical The lecture was well attended and well Reflections on CARICOM at 40” to mark received. the 40th anniversary of the signing of the Treaty of Chaguaramas. Cave Hill’s Students Win First Microsoft Windows SALISES Hosts Policy Forum Phone Competition on State Punishment The First Microsoft Windows Phone On Wednesday, October 24, 2012, the Competition in Barbados was held under Sir Arthur Lewis Institute for Social the aegis of the Ministry of Industry, and Economic Studies hosted a Public International Business, Commerce Policy Forum on the topic Contemporary and Small Business Development in Perspectives on State Punishment: The Case collaboration with Microsoft’s Trinidad- of Barbados. Presenters were: Lieutenant based office and Cave Hill’s Department Colonel John Nurse, Superintendent of of Computer Science, Mathematics and Prisons, Barbados; Mr Jonathan Yearwood, Physics. The competition ran from January National Council on Substance Abuse and 4 to February 16, 2013, with two days Ms Kim Ramsey, National Task Force on (January 8 and 9) of training by Microsoft Crime Prevention. staff and with the ensuing weeks dedicated The annual SALISES Public Policy lecture to creating and submitting the apps. was delivered presented by Dr Paul Sutton The contestants, who ranged in age from on June 11, 2013 on the topic “Westminster 18 to 30, were required to create apps Challenged, Westminster Confirmed: Which featuring local cultural themes/heritage; Way Caribbean Constitutional Reform?” entertainment in Barbados; games or Winners of the Microsoft Windows Phone Competition L-R: Alexander Patrick, Jamal Rice and Rashid Holder. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 56 O U T R E A C H sports and media. Cave Hill’s final year the PTA involves implementation of a Computer Science students: Jamal Rice, longitudinal educational intervention to Alexander Patrick and Rashid Holder support the learning in the sciences by won over 29 other contestants with their a cohort of 3rd form science students Windows Phone app, Barbados Life, right through to 6th form examinations. which featured ‘what’s on’ and other The principle behind the project has tourist-oriented information about local been the establishment of a structured happenings, culinary and leisure spots for intervention to align abstract knowledge visitors and other interested persons. taught in the classroom to real life practical situations. Most activities are held at the Lodge school but the project Faculties Collaborate in Pilot also includes focussed practical sessions Education Intervention Project and field trips using the facilities, staff and resources of the Campus. Since, such a An exciting project, in keeping with the structured educational intervention using 50th anniversary year of the Campus, a support group led by professionals has been the collaboration Faculties of has not previously been described in Science and Technology and Medical the literature, this initiative provides a Sciences with the Lodge School significant research opportunity that Old Scholars’ Association in a pilot may prove to be successful in influencing Ms Diane Cummins presenting educational intervention. The project the learning style of the Campus’ future Ms Verna St. Rose which is supported by contributions students. Greaves with her award. from the Lodge Old Scholars’ and IGDS:NBU Celebrates 10 years of Caribbean Institute in Gender and Development During the year, the IGDS:NBU celebrated the 10th Anniversary of its intensive gender and development programme, Caribbean Institute in Gender and Development. Twenty-eight individuals from across the Caribbean participated in the programme and the Unit took the opportunity to honour one of its first participants / facilitators, Ms Verna St. Rose Greaves, at the opening ceremony. Major sponsors of the Institute were UN Women, Caribbean Development Bank and the British High Commission. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 57 Recipients of the Honouring Barbadian Women in Communities Award. IGDS:NBU Honours Eleanor Gill Sealy from St, Michael, Mrs Barbadian Women Esther Pricilla Welch from St. Peter, Mrs Doriel C. Weeks-Mason from St. Philip, Ms On March 08, 2013 IGDS:NBU in Adina Yvonne Dawe from St Thomas and collaboration with the Community the young awardee, Ms Rashida Beckles. Development Department Ministry of Social Care, Constituency Empowerment and Community Development, Academy of Sports Initiates commemorating International Women’s Community Programme Day by staged its fourth triennial awards ceremony “Honouring Barbadian Women The Cave Hill Academy of Sports in Communities”. Community Outreach programme in football was launched on Wednesday, October 3, In celebration of IGDS:NBU 20th 2012, at the West Terrace Primary School. anniversary in 2013, a young woman The programme was co-ordinated by Mr was also honoured. The recipients of Christian Renwick, Programme Assistant, the awards included: Ms Diana Patricia assisted by some of the UWIFC footballers Murray from St. Andrew, Ms Laura Wendy and included both academics and football. Rudder from Christ Church,101 years old The programme was conducted on every Ms Hortense E. Rock from St. George, Wednesday up to November 28, 2012. West Ms Heather Patricia Jordan from St, Terrace Primary School took second place James, Mrs Vivian Cummins from St. John, in the BICO sponsored tournament and Mrs Millicent Cave from St. Joseph, Mrs has requested that a similar programme be Pamoleta Atwell from St. Lucy, Ms Jennifer implemented for cricket and track and field. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 58 A N N U A L R E P O RT Administrators of the Campus 2012/2013 Prof E. Nigel Harris Vice-Chancellor Professor E. Nigel Harris, BS (Howard), MPhil (Yale), MD (U of Penn), DM (UWI) Principal Professor Sir Hilary Beckles, BA, PhD (Hull) Prof Sir Hilary Beckles Deputy Principal Prof Pedro V. Welch Professor Eudine Barriteau BSc (UWI), MPA (NYU), PhD (Howard) Registry Mrs Jacqueline Wade JP, BA (UWI), MSc (Manc) Campus Registrar Bursary Prof Eudine Barriteau Ms Lisa A. C. Alleyne Dr David Berry BSc (UWI), FCCA FCA MBA (Oxford Brooks), MCMI Campus Bursar Deans Faculty of Humanities and Education Professor Pedro V. Welch, BA (UWI), MSc (Bath), Cert. Ed. Admin (UWI), PhD (UWI) Mrs Jacqueline Wade Prof Joseph Branday Faculty of Law Dr David S Berry, BA (UT), LL.B (UBC), LL.M (Queen’s), PhD (Edin) Legal Ed Cert, Attorney-at-Law Faculty of Medical Sciences Professor Joseph Branday, MBBS (UWI), MS, FACS, FRCSEd, MSc (Med Edu) Ms Lisa Alleyne Mr Peter Gibbs Faculty of Science and Technology Mr Peter Gibbs, BSc (UWI), MSc (Guelph), Dip.Ed.(UWI) Faculty of Social Sciences Dr Justin Robinson, BSc (UWI), Msc (FIU), PhD (Manc) Library Ms Elizabeth Watson, BA (UWI), MSc Library Studies (Long Is.) Ms Elizabeth Watson Campus Librarian Dr Justin Robinson The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 59 Membership of Campus Council Cave Hill 2012/2013 Dr Paul Altman Dr Paul Altman Professor E. Nigel Harris Chairman Vice-Chancellor Chairman Deans Professor E. Nigel Harris Dr David Berry Vice-Chancellor Professor Joseph Branday Mr Peter Gibbs Professor Sir Hilary Beckles Dr Justin Robinson Campus Principal Professor Pedro Welch Professor Eudine Barriteau Academic Board Representative, Cave Hill Campus Deputy Principal Dr Leonard Nurse Mrs Jacqueline Wade Appointed by Academic Board, Mona Campus Registrar Professor Claudette Williams Ms Lisa Alleyne Appointed by Academic Board, St. Augustine The Campus Bursar PVC Prof Clement Sankat Appointed by the Government Appointed by the Open Campus of Barbados Dr Vivienne Roberts The Hon Ronald Jones Minister of Education and Human Resources Representative of the Association of Mr Wendell Kellman Caribbean Tertiary Institutions (ACTI) Dr Gladstone Best Appointed by the Governments Mr Perry George of the UWI 12 Countries Appointed by the UWI Alumni Association The Hon Girlyn Miguel Barbados Chapter St Vincent and the Grenadines Mr Cyril Burke The Hon Reuben Meade Premier of Montserrat Student Representatives Mr Damian Belgrave Appointed by the Chancellor Mr Dalano DaSouza Dr Julian Ferdinand Representative, Senior Admin/Professional Staff Mr Ralph Taylor Mr Clint Hurley Sir Roy Trotman Mr Theodore Isaac Representative, ATS Staff Mr Geoffrey Mapp The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 60 A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 Financial Summary INCOME For the financial year ended July 31, 2013, the total income of the Campus was $209 million compared to $218 million for the year ended July 31, 2012, as detailed below: 2013 2012 Source 0% 0% $’000 $’000 Government Contributions 123,674 59% 127,368 59% Tuition and Other Student Fees 32,672 16% 35,535 16% Project Income 45,655 22% 47,054 22% Commercial Activities 4,491 2% 4,893 2% Investment and Other Income 2,283 1% 2,726 1% TOTAL 208,775 100 217,576 100 Income from Government Contributions Income from Government Contributions totalled $123.7 million (July 2013 - $127.4 million) and represented 59% (July 2013) of total income. Tuition and Other Student Fees Revenue from tuition and other fees decreased from $35.5 million in 2012 to $32.7 million in the current year. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 61 Project Income a) Externally Funded Income Included in project income are funds received from external donors for research and other specific programmes. During the year, income from this source totalled $4.3 million (2012 - $5.2 million). The following are examples of the external projects started during the year: Name Of Sponsor Name of Project Value Faculty/Unit SOL Caribbean Ltd SOL Scholarship Fund BD$ 900,000.00 C’bean Health Research The Prevalence of Human Papilloma virus US$ 8,000.00 Faculty of Medical Council Infections in Females and its link to Cancer in Sciences B’dos in the context of vaccine introduction B’dos Investment Barbados Hot Pepper Project BD$ 45,000 Dept of Biological & & Development Chemical Sciences – Cooperation Faculty of Science & Technology National Institute of Hyperglycemia & Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes US$ 90,718.00 Chronic Disease Diabetes, Digestive (HAPO) Follow-up Study Research Centre & Kidney Diseases – (CDRC) thru’ Northwestern University IDRC - Canada Partnership for Canada-C’bean Community US$ 180,000 CERMES Climate change Adaptation Project (ParCA) (Scholarships only) Centre for Caribbean Poetry Project – Research Assistant BD$ 7,370 Faculty of Education Commonwealth Education, University of Cambridge National HIV/AIDS Sexuality, Risk and Vulnerability among BD$ 30,000 UWI-HARP Commission University Students in Barbados Columbia University Building Capacity to Manage Water Resources US$ 18,000 CERMES and Climate Risk in the Caribbean b) Other Projects Income from Other Projects totaled $41.4 million (2012 – $41.8 million). This consists of contributions for special initiatives, self-financing activities such as the taught Masters Programmes and the MBBS Programme and funds earned by departments through consultancies. Total Project Income, both Special and Other, decreased from $47 million to $45.7 million. Income from projects constitutes a significant source of income for the Campus. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 62 A N N U A L R E P O RT Commercial Activities Both the Bookshop and the Halls of Residence reflected deficits and surpluses respectively on their operations. Efforts at cost containment are continuing. Investment and Other Income This consists mainly of interest income earned by the Campus from the investment of funds accumulated from past savings. EXPENDITURE The breakdown of Gross Campus Expenditure from University Grants Committee (UGC) Funds for the year is as follows: 2013 2012 Category % % $’000 $’000 Teaching & Research Departments 66,355 46% 67,096 47% Library & Information Services 17,244 12% 19,050 13% Administration 25,043 17% 23,420 16% New & Upgraded Programmes (440) (0.5%) 1,394 1% Central Services 17,788 12% 18,658 13% Depreciation 5,661 4% 5,510 4% Employee Benefit Expense 6,834 5% (2,192) (2%) Finance Costs 3,770 2% 3,774 2% Provision for impairment of amount 2,193 1% 4,915 3% due from governments Provision for doubtful debts 552 0.5% 2,154 2% TOTAL 145,000 100 142,381 100 Overall UGC expenditure has been increased by approximately $2.6 million compared to the prior year. Approximately $8 million of that increase results from the application of local annuity rates in calculating the Employee Benefit Expense. Further reduction has occurred as a result of cost containment measures required by the reduction in resources available from government contributions. Cost containment measures taken included the freezing of some posts, the reduction in travel costs and energy saving initiatives. In light of the current funding issues facing the Campus, these measures will need to be continued. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 63 Publications During the Academic Year 2012 /13, the staff of the Cave Hill Campus continued its record of excellence in publications as collectively they produced 20 books, 44 book chapters, 189 journal articles, 17 technical reports, 12 conference proceeding and 8 abstracts in addition to several publications in the local and regional media. It is noteworthy that most of this intellectual output has been peered reviewed. First Scholarly Work of the region and a seasoned activist in the on Reparation movement for social justice and advocacy of historical truth, the book explore the Britain’s Black Debt: Reparations for Caribbean origins and development of reparations as a Slavery and Native Genocide is the first regional and international process. Beckles scholarly work that looks comprehensively weaves detailed historical data on Caribbean at the reparation discussion in the slavery and the transatlantic slave trade Caribbean. Authored by Professor Hilary together with legal principles and the Beckles, the leading economic historian politics of post-colonialism, and Professor Sir Hilary sets out a solid academic analysis Beckles presenting a of the evidence. He concludes copy of Black Debt to Ms Elizabeth Watson, that Britain has a case of Campus Librarian. reparations to answer, which the Caribbean should litigate. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 64 P U B L I C AT I O N S Collection Provides Critical questions, and choices that have faced the Analysis of Caribbean region’s people over the last five hundred years. Already, the volumes are being The Caribbean Political Thought collections use in courses on Caribbean politics and (Caribbean Political Thought: The Colonial State intellectual traditions at the University of the to Caribbean Internationalisms and Caribbean West Indies (Mona and Cave Hill Campuses), Political Thought: Theories of the Post-Colonial State University of New York at Buffallo and State) edited by Aaron Kamugisha seeks to Tufts University. uncover, collect and reflect on the wealth of political thought produced in Caribbean Cultural Thought: From Plantation to the Caribbean region. It hopes Diaspora edited by Drs Yanique Hume and to fill a lacuna in the intellectual Aaron Kamugisha takes a critical appraisal work of the region, which of the wealth of cultural criticism and though rich in its presentation epistemological developments in the study of of political ideas, has not been Caribbean societies. The project engages in systematized and collected for a dialogic exercise of excavating classic texts another generation of scholars, of the past and placing them in dialogue students and a larger Caribbean with more contemporary interrogations and intelligentsia. This is attempted explorations of regional cultural politics and for the first time in these two debates concerning identity, history, (post) readers which spans the region, coloniality, diaspora, aesthetics, systems of though with a focus on the thought, gender and sexuality, notions of the Anglophone Caribbean. The popular and nationalisms. These seemingly ideas of revolutionaries and disparate concerns are brought together intellectuals are counter-posed under the overarching intellectual project of with manifestos, constitutional Caribbean Cultural Thought, as a governing excerpts and speeches to term to incorporate the long history of give a sophisticated view of critical practice and its intersection with the range of political options, political work in the Caribbean intellectual tradition from within the academy and beyond its confines. The volume also takes as its point of departure a more inclusive and comprehensive look at the notion of the Pan-Caribbean, unencumbered by the colonially induced linguistic divisions that haunt its scholarship. This reader is also used in courses on Caribbean Cultural studies and intellectual traditions at the University of the West Indies (Mona, St. Augustine and Cave Hill Campuses), State University of New York at Buffallo and Tufts University. Dr Aaron Kamugisha The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 65 Campus Lecturers Explore New aid understanding Genre of French Literature of the key topics. Included in the text This collection of essays edited by Cave are document-based, Hill colleagues, Drs Isabelle Constant, short response and Kahiudi C. Mabana and Mr Philip Nanton essay questions, as explores concepts present in literatures well as suggestions in French that, since the 2007 manifesto, for further reading more and more critics, suspicious of and a full list of the term Francophonie, now prefer to references. The end- designate as littérature-monde (world of-chapter elements literature). provide teachers with The book shows how the three material to generate movements of antillanité, créolité and discussion and debate littérature-monde each in their own about the issues. way break with the past and distance themselves from the hexagonal centre. The critics in this collection show how Text on Offshore writers seek to represent an authentic Financial Law Updated view of their history, culture, identities, reality and diversities. According to many In this second edition of Offshore Financial of the contributors, creolization and Law, Trusts and Tax Professor Rosemary littérature-monde offer new perspectives Antoine updates the reader with and possibly a new genre of literature. developments in case law and legislation and also included a more extensive range of offshore jurisdictions including new coverage of Switzerland, Dubai, Hong Kong, Alaska, Historian Provides Key Nevada, Singapore, and Liechtenstein. CAPE History Text Recognizing the importance of Islamic finance there is now a Atlantic Interactions: A Textbook for Caribbean chapter on the Shari’a History Students co-authored by Dr David Trust in offshore financial Browne, Principal of Queen’s College, law. Other new chapters Barbados and historian Dr Henderson focus on US ‘Offshore’ Carter is recognised as a key text for Trusts such as the Nevada students studying for the Caribbean and Alaska Trusts and Advanced Proficiency Examination (CAPE) the Foundation trust, in History. This new and expanded edition a vehicle used in civil covers the entire History syllabus, providing jurisdictions. The text a sound basis for study and examination is considered to be an success. The style and format of the book essential reference source have been maintained to adhere closely on the law and practice in to both units 1 and 2 and students are this sector. provided with end-of-chapter activities to The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 66 P U B L I C AT I O N S New Text on HIV and to truly critique the work of the Caribbean Human Rights Court of Justice alongside that of the Privy Council. Through the examination of well- Edited by Professor Rose-Marie Belle known Caribbean cases, the contributors Antoine, Professor of Labour Law and dispel the myth that Caribbean law is Offshore Financial Law, and Professor flawed and posit other legal reasoning Sir George Alleyne, Chancellor and that reconcile the foundation on which Professor Emeritus of the University Caribbean Law is based with the unique of the West Indies, Legal and Policy needs and realities of the Caribbean. Perspectives on HIV and Human Rights in the Caribbean is the outcome of a path-breaking symposium on European Union Law HIV and human rights organised by Text Revised the University of the West Indies Cave Hill, together with the Pan Fully revised and updated, the third edition Caribbean Partnership against HIV of European Union Law by Professor and AIDS (PANCAP) and the Joint Kaczorowska-Ireland provides an Professor Sir United Nations Programme on HIV/ exhaustive, yet easily readable, account of George Alleyne AIDS (UNAIDS). The book highlights issues the complex and ever changing subject of surrounding discriminatory laws and policies EU law. Case summaries and judgments are in the region. It also provides academics and highlighted in colour-tinted boxes for ease of policy-makers with options for removing reference, and are accompanied by key facts laws that limit people’s right to health, and analysis, often in the light of subsequent freedom of movement and equal access to developments. This book is considered housing, education and work. essential reading for those studying EU law at both undergraduate and postgraduate level and will be of interest to students of Legal Collection Critiques Work political science, social science and business of the CCJ studies. Transitions in Caribbean Law: Law-Making, Constitutionalism and the Convergence of New Text Explores Caribbean National and International Law, traces Administrative Law Caribbean legal thought and its development across many areas of law. Issues of Professor Eddy Ventose’s Commonwealth administrative, constitutional, corporate and Caribbean commercial, international, and labour law Administrative are explored in the context of the analyses Law published of the Privy Council, the transnational by Routledge dimensions of law and within the purview comprehensively of the intrusive role of international law explores the in domestic law. Co-edited by Dr David S nature and Berry, Dean of the Faculty of Law Transitions function of in Caribbean Law is the first legal collection administrative The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 67 law in contemporary Caribbean society. student editors, and has formalised It considers the administrative machinery the Review’s article submission process. of Caribbean States; Parliament, the The Review will continue to be published Executive and the Judiciary. It examines biannually. the basis for judicial review of executive and administrative action in the Caribbean Lust and Love for by looking at the statutory provisions and of Power Explored that underpin this and the plethora of case law emerging from the region. The In Love and Power: Caribbean Discourses book discusses how the courts in the on Gender Professor Barriteau and the Commonwealth Caribbean have sought to contributors explore the intersections of define principles of administrative law; the love and power in the multiple dimensions alternative methods by which the rights of of Caribbean life and society. In the citizens are protected, including the use process, they expose the ways in which of tribunals and inquiries, as well as look the lust and love for and of power, disrupts forwards to the increasingly significant knowledge production and everyday life. role of Caribbean Community law and The authors simultaneously critique and bodies such as CARICOM and the OECS. create knowledge about the lives of women and men within Coming shortly after his earlier work the Caribbean and its diaspora. Medical Patent Law: The Challenges of They employ a range of analytical Medical Treatment, Professor Ventose frameworks to dissect the themes makes another significant contribution of history, international relations, to the literature. In his earlier work, he philosophy, intimate partner devoted a chapter to medical patents violence, feminist thought and under US law. In Patenting Medical and activism, mothering, masculinities, Genetic Diagnostic Methods he expands diasporic migration, international that chapter into an entire text. Scholars, finance, entrepreneurship, practitioners and students seriously erotica, and desire. The volume interested in the evolution of medical offers a significant contribution patents under US law will find Ventose’s to Caribbean thought by latest work to be invaluable. documenting the work of scholars who are creating a multidisciplinary language on relations of gender. The contributors are Caribbean Law Review Returns drawn from the three residential campuses of the University of the West Indies and The Faculty revived the Caribbean include, Eudine Barriteau, April Bernard, Law Review, under the editorship of Roxanne Burton, Jessica Byron, Charmaine Dean Berry with Ms Jill St George, the Crawford, Halimah Deshong, Aviston Faculty’s Research Fellow, serving as Downes, Wendy Grenade, Tonya Haynes, Assistant Editor. The editorial team Kristina Hinds Harrison, Gabrielle Hosein, has re-established and expanded both Carmen Hutchinson Miller, Tara Inniss, the Editorial Advisory Committee and Jonathan Lashley, Annecka Marshall, Don Editorial Committee, has recruited Marshall, and Patricia Mohammed. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 68 A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 Campus Events During the year the Campus hosted a wide range of events in celebration of its 50th Anniversary of service to Barbados and the region. On January 17, 2013 the Campus launched Part one of this series was delivered on its 50th Anniversary Celebrations with a January 31 by Emeritus Professor Sir press conference attended by the Minister Woodville under the theme Errol Barrow of Education Science, Vision in Establishing the Cave Hill Campus. Technology and innovation Sir Woodville reconstructed the political the Hon Ronald Jones, development that gave rise to the campus Chairman of Campus, which evolved from a College of Arts and Dr Paul Altman and senior Sciences. He addressed the role of the members of the Campus Right Excellent Errol Barrow, Minister of community. The event Education, the Hon. Cameron Tudor and was chaired by Campus Dr Eric Williams, Former Prime Minister Registrar, Mrs Jacqueline of Trinidad and Tobago in the establishment Wade and was carried of the Campus. by live web cast across Sir Keith Hunte, Principal of the Cave the region. During the Hill Campus from 1983 to 2002 revisited ceremony the 50th the early expansion of the Campus in his Anniversary logo Cave Hill presentation entitled Building Capacity @50 Path to Prosperity delivered on February 7, 2013. was unveiled by the Minister and a collection Sir Hilary who followed Sir Keith as Principal of speeches edited by and in the lecture series spoke of the Sir Hilary Beckles was presented to the Campus’ rapid expansion in enrolment in participants. order to meet national and regional needs under the theme Cave Hill at the Cross Roads: the Crisis of Education in National Development. Public Lecture Series Examines He highlighted the partnership with the Cave Hill’s Past and Present local private sector and the international community who helped to finance the Campus’ modernization and transformation. The history of the Cave Hill Campus was addressed in a four-part lecture series held On April 18, 2013 Deputy Principal during the academic year at the Walcott Professor Eudine Barriteau, delivered the Warner Theater of the Errol Barrow fourth lecture in the series under the title Centre for Creative Imagination. Cave Hill in the Contemporary: The University as a Social Space. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 69 Dominican Historian Delivers George Lamming Distinguished Lecture The third annual George Lamming Distinguished Lecture was delivered June 6, 2013 by noted Dominican historian Dr Lennox Honychurch on the topic “In the Castles of Our Skins: Architectural Heritage and the Caribbean Psyche”. The International Diaspora Arts Festival (IDAF) celebrates Cave Hill’s 50TH and EBCCI’s 5TH In celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Cave Hill Campus, and EBCCI’s fifth year of operations, the Centre opened its 2013 installation of the IDAF, Celebrating the Creative Imagination in Cave Hill’s First 50 on March 22, 2013 with a tribute to Anthony “Gabby” Carter, who received the honorary degree of Doctor of Letters during the graduation ceremony of October 2012. The evening of music comprised selections by “Gabby” and interpretations of his greatest hits by local vocalists and the Cavite Chorale. This was followed on April 5 by Twilight Jazz: the Detroit-Barbados Jazz Connection an evening of jazz music featuring Marcus Belgrave and his wife, Grammy nominated vocalist, Joan Belgrave augmented by The EBCCI Theatre Ensemble class the Belgrave Quintet, and the Barbados Dr Lennox performed Embodied Knowing, a theatrical Honeychurch Community College Band. Marcus, who is presentation written and directed by Sonia delivering the the sole surviving member of the original George Lamming Williams with choreography by Neri Torres. Distinguished Ray Charles band, was Charles’ lead trumpet The IDAF Festival ended with an evening of Lecture. player. This event brought to a close a dance entitled Of Sweat and Zeal featuring series of workshops for young musicians the Technique and Ensemble classes of the of the Barbados Community College and EBCCI under the artistic direction of Dance the EBCCI which were conducted by Lecturer Ms Neri Torres. Mr Belgrave. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 70 C A M P U S E V E N T S Participants of the Caribbean Institute in Gender and Development (CIGAD) and staff of the Institute. Caribbean Institute in Gender and Development (CIGAD) services area. The exhibition’s curation and reception at the end of the opening The 10th Caribbean Institute in Gender and ceremony was sponsored by the Barbados Development: An Intensive Training Programme National Oil Co. Ltd. The Main Library was was held from July 1-31, 2013 and attracted able to secure external funding to purchase applicants from across the Caribbean Ghana, a piece from each of the featured artists. Nigeria, Pakistan and Ethiopia. Twenty- These acquisitions included Pages (painting) eight men and women from 10 Caribbean by Randy White, funded by EBSCO; One countries and from diverse educational, Stop Shop (painting) by Andy Archer, funded by Mrs Louise Martyr of St. Lucia; and, employment and social backgrounds Olive Blossom (mahogany carving) by Kirtis participated in the programme. The Norville, funded by Courtesy Garage Ltd. programme achieved its overall objective of All of the works acquired had won award at introducing the participants to theoretical the NIFCA. and methodological approaches to the issue of gender relations; and the developing of the skills to apply gender analysis to various Government, Sociology and social and economic situations which Social Work Hosts lecture on they would be faced with at home, in the Child Sexual Abuse workplace and in their communities. On February 26, 2013, a lecture entitled Preventing Child Sexual Abuse: A Whole of Main Library Host Art Exhibition Society Responsibility was delivered by the in Celebration of Cave Hill @50 editors of a book entitled Understanding Child Sexual Abuse: Perspectives from the Caribbean The art show A Second Chance for Three Men which was launched by the Department of from the East was held in the Main Library Government Sociology and Social Work during the last two weeks of March 2013. (GSSW) in collaboration with UNICEF and This exhibition of paintings, drawings as well the University of Huddersfield. Dr Letnie as carved wooden and fiberglass objects Rock, Senior Lecturer in Social Work was a created by inmates of Her Majesty’s Prison key organiser of the event and contributed a Dodds were displayed in the library’s public book chapter to the book. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 71 In collaboration with the Grace Showan Educational Foundation and the Social Order Congress, the 2nd Psychology lecture was presented on March 7, 2013. The lecture entitled The Values and Applications of Social Justice and Psychology in the Caribbean was delivered by Dr Sharon-ann Gopaul- McNicol, Clinical Psychologist. Chief Justice Gibson Delivers Sir Arthur Lewis Distinguished Lecture The Sir Arthur Lewis Distinguished Lecture was delivered by Sir Marston Gibson, Chief Justice of Barbados. The lecture titled: Accelerating Justice: The UWI in the Justice Process, spoke to a role for the UWI and its students in ameliorating the severe backlog and Professor of Dutch and European L-R: Dr David of cases in the Justice system of Barbados Constitutional Law, Tilburg University Berry, Dean of the Faculty and was described as “refreshingly different”. who delivered a lecture on The United of Law and Sir Nations, Human Rights and Human Rights Marston Gibson, Chief Justice of Defenders on December 12, 2012. The talk Barbados. Eminent Speakers was co-hosted by the Faculty of Law and Lecture Series generously sponsored by the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands and the On November 9, 2012, His Excellency United Nations Resident Coordinator. Judge Patrick Robinson delivered a Deputy Dean Cumberbatch opened with lecture entitled How Malleable is the Principle the Welcome Note, and was followed by of Separation of Powers in the Constitutional Introductory Remarks from H.E. Lucita System of the Commonwealth Caribbean: The Moenir Alam, Ambassador of the Kingdom Strange Fruit that is the Unincorporated Treaty. of the Netherlands. Closing Remarks Judge Robinson is an eminent Jamaican were provided by Mrs Michelle Gyles- international lawyer and former President McDonnough, UN Resident Coordinator of the International Criminal Tribunal for UNDP Resident Representative. the Former Yugoslavia. The lecture was well The Hon Mr Justice J. Fraser Martin attended, stimulating and very well received. CD BA BCL, Justice of the Superior Court The Faculty of Law was also pleased to of Québec delivered a lecture on ‘The host a number of guest lectures over Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms 30 the course of the academic year. These years down the road’ on January 29, 2013; included: The Hon Justice John M. Evans, Judge, Dr Ernst M.H. Hirsch Ballin, Professor Canadian Federal Court of Appeal delivered of Human Rights, University of Amsterdam, a lecture on ‘Legitimate Expectations The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 72 C A M P U S E V E N T S and Judicial Deference in Canadian Studies (SALISES) Cave Hill of the 14th Administrative Law’ on March 8, 2013. annual SALISES Conference which was Mr Simon Calhaem MA (Oxon), of held from 22-24 April under the theme the Honourable Society of Lincoln’s Inn, Towards a New Development Paradigm for Barrister-at-Law delivered a lecture on the Caribbean: The Next 50 Years, at the Divi Family L – Origins and Evolution April 3, 2013. Southwinds Beach Resort in Barbados. The Conference dates were selected to coincide with the UWI’s Semester Break to facilitate attendance by teaching staff. Faculty of Law Hosts Launch of Legal Environmental Text Over 70 papers covering the following sub-themes were represented: On March 01, 2013, The Faculty hosted the Environment, Alternative Energy, the launch of Principles of Caribbean Environmental Green Economy and Sustainability; Trade, Law, by The Honourable Mr Justice Winston Industrial Policy and Competitiveness C. Anderson, of the Caribbean Court of in the Caribbean; Contributions to Justice The event was well attended and Caribbean Development Thought: Sir provoked good discussion on environmental Arthur Lewis; Pre- and Post-Lewis; law issues in the Caribbean. Public Sector Issues in the Caribbean; Governance, Fiscal Policy and the Debt Crisis; Private Sector Development, SMEs Noted Political Scientist Delivers and Finance in a Development Context; 7th Patrick Emmanuel Lecture Regional Integration and Caribbean Economic Development; Caribbean Sovereignty and Governance; Media The Faculty of Social Sciences Representation, Identity, History and hosted three public lectures Culture; and Education, Technology and during the period under Development. review: The 7th Patrick A. M. Emmanuel Memorial Lecture was presented on November 8, 2012 by Dr George Belle, Scholar Delivers 18th Annual Senior Lecture, Political Caribbean Women Catalysts Science. The lecture was for Change Annual Lecture entitled, Naive Colonialism: 21st Century Revolution and On November 16, 2012 the Eighteenth Political Immortality. Annual Caribbean Women Catalysts for Dr George Belle Change Public Lecture was delivered by Professor Amina Mama, Director of Women SALISES, Cave Hill Hosts and Gender Studies at the University of 14th Annual Conference California, Davis. Professor Mama lectured on the topic Post-Colonial Feminism in Africa, A major highlight of the Academic Year and Beyond. As part of the visit, Professor 2012-2013 was the hosting by the Sir Arthur Mama was interviewed on the television Lewis Institute of Social and Economic programme Morning Barbados. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 73 support sexual violence as well as to show the effects and prevalence of the problem in the Caribbean. At this event, students and lecturers at the IGDS:NBU advocated for change through song, personal testimonies and calls to action. One Billion Rising…” campaign was held for the first time on February 14,2014, to create global solidarity among entities whose work is aimed at eliminating violence against women. Margaret Gill is IGDS:NBU Poet Laureate Professor Amina Mama delivering 18th Caribbean Women Catalysts for Change In commemoration of the IGDS:NBU’s (CWCC) lecture. 20th Anniversary, Margaret Gill was selected as IGDS:NBU’s Poet Laureate. Gill, a tutor in Foundations of Written IGDS:NBU Art Action Project English, is the winner of the inaugural Frank Collymore Literary Endowment Award and Against Gender-Based Violence is considered one of Barbados’ most gifted contemporary female poets. On November 29, 2012 IGDS:NBU hosted the Art Action Project as part of the 16 Days of Activism against Gender- Ms. Margaret Gill, based Violence. The Project included IGDS:NBU 20th Anniversary Poet an evening of poetry, spoken word, film Laureate. and music in which the focus was on the problem of violence against women. Performers included members of the League of Extraordinary Poets, the Cave Hill Campus Music Society, university students and lecturers, in addition to Barbadian and regional poets. IGDS: Nita Barrow Unit Lead Campaign Against Violence Against Women As part of the Barbados/ Caribbean Rising activities, the IGDS:NBU collaborated with the clubs, societies and organizations to call attention to the attitudes and actions which The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 74 A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 Saluting Achievements The Cave Hill Campus conferred honorary degrees on the following five Caribbean luminaries during its annual graduation ceremony: The Right Rev Rufus Brome, 12th Bishop and implementation of legal equality for of Barbados and the country’s first Barbadian women securing their rights as mothers and Bishop (1993-2003). The Rt Rev Brome is a wives in property and marital law. Sir Henry distinguished Caribbean theologian who has is a member of a number of professional l-r Dr Paul Altman, had considerable impact upon the role and societies such as the Inter-parliamentary Chairman, Cave Hill Campus function of the Anglican Church through his Human Rights Network, the International Council, Professor contribution to the advancement of civil and Institute for Democracy and Electoral Sir Hilary Beckles, human rights in Barbados and the region. Assistance and the Barbados Museum and Sir Henry Forde, the Rt Rev Rufus Historical Societies. For his meritorious Brome, Dr Julian Sir Henry de Boulay Forde, QC is service to Barbados, Sir Henry was conferred Hunte, and Sir George Alleyne, recognised Caribbean legal icon. As Attorney the order of Knight of St Andrew by the Chancellor,UWI. General, Sir Henry championed the creation Office of the Governor-General of Barbados. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 75 Dr Julian Hunte, has provided exemplary One of the few women in the world to have civil service to St Lucia and the Caribbean been appointed Governor of a Central Bank, for over 50 years. He has contributed to the Dr Marion Williams was the first Saluting Achievements banking and financial sector as Chairman and female Governor of the Central Chief Executive of the Julian R. Hunte Group Bank of Barbados holding this of Companies. Over the years, Dr Hunte position from 1999-2009. has participated in the game of cricket in the She has also served in a capacities of both player and administrator number of professional at the national, regional and international positions, most notably as levels. He has served as President of the St a founding member and Lucia Cricket Association and the Windward the first President of the Islands Cricket Board and was a Vice- Barbados Institute of Banking President of the West Indies Cricket Board and Finance, former Chairman of Dr Marion Williams before his succession to President in 2007. the Steering Committee of the Caribbean Regional Technical Assistance Centre Sir Keith Hunte, former Principal of the (CARTAC) and Chairman of the Executive Cave Hill Campus has dedicated his life and Committee of the Caribbean Centre for career as an educator and public servant Monetary Studies (CCMS. In 2006, Dr to the advancement of Caribbean people. Marion Williams was honoured with the In addition to his extensive administrative Award of Honorary Fellow of the Caribbean portfolio at the University, Sir Keith Association of Banking and Financial contributed extensively Institutes (CABFI) and was also the recipient to civil society. He of the Gold Crown of Merit, Barbados. served as Chairman of the Caribbean Broadcasting Cave Hill’s Professor Appointed Corporation; Pro-Vice-Chancellor for Deputy Chairman Undergraduate Studies of the Electoral and Boundaries Dr Alan Cobley, Professor of South Commission, Barbados; Sir Keith Hunte African and Comparative History was Chairman of the Public appointed Pro-Vice-Chancellor for Services Commission, Undergraduate Studies with Barbados and Chairman effect from February 1, 2013. of the Caribbean Examinations Council. Professor Cobley has had Most recently, he held the position of a distinguished record of Chairman of the Committee for National scholarly work and service Reconciliation, Barbados. On the occasion to UWI. He has authored, of the 21st Anniversary of the Independence co-authored and edited of Barbados, Sir Keith Hunte was made a several published books; Knight of St Andrew – the highest National written numerous articles Award of Barbados – in recognition of his in peer-reviewed journals, book Professor Alan Cobley contribution to Higher Education in the chapters, book reviews and conference Caribbean. presentations and has been a consulting The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 76 S A L U T I N G A C H I E V E M E N T S Principal’s Award editor of the Journal of Caribbean History PRINCIPAL’S AWARD for Excellence since 2002. In addition to carrying a heavy L-R: Dr Aaron Kamugushi, FOR EXCELLENCE Dr Leah Garner-O’Neale, teaching and supervisory load, Professor Dr Grace Foyombo, Cobley has been able an active scholar, A record seven persons were honoured Ms Betty Thorpe, Professor Sir Hilary researcher and administrator. His service with the Principal’s Award for Excellence Beckles, Mrs Gale Hall, to the Cave Hill has included seven years as during the annual Retirees and Long Service Mrs Patricia Atherley and Deputy Dean of the Faculty of Humanities Awards Ceremony held on December 14, Mr Marlon Woodroffe. and Education, five years as Dean and one 2013 at the Lloyd Erskine Sandiford Centre. semester as Acting Head of the Centre Dr Grace Fayombo was commended for for Gender and Development Studies. He her high quality teaching and excellent was Campus Coordinator of the School of publication record, Dr Aaron Kamugisha Graduate Studies and Research for Cave was awarded for his outstanding research Hill prior to the current appointment. His accomplishments while Dr Leah Garner- University service also includes membership O’Neale, received the award for her on various Campus and University Boards outstanding teaching. and Committees as well as several terms as Mrs Gale Hall, Ms Betty Thorpe, Mr Marlon a member of University Council. Particularly Woodroffe, and Mrs Patricia Atherley noteworthy is his chairmanship of the received awards for Outstanding Service to Academic Quality Assurance Sub-Committee the Campus Community. (AQAC) of the Cave Hill Academic Board. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 77 IGDS:NBU Wins UWI VICE CHANCELLOR’S AWARD Press Award FOR EXCELLENCE On January 24, 2013 the UWI Press Professor Rose-Marie Belle Antoine was awarded IGDS:NBU for “Outstanding one of the recipients of the 2012/13 Vice- Contribution to Caribbean Scholarly Chancellor’s Award for Excellence for her Activity”. The Press congratulated the contribution to Public Service. The Annual IGDS:NBU in leading the way in the Vice Chancellor’s Awards for Excellence production of scholarship in feminism and were initiated in 1993 by former UWI Vice gender relations in the Caribbean and Chancellor Sir Alister McIntyre in recognition thanked the Unit for partnering with them of the high achievement of academic and to co-publishing four books. Dr Charmaine senior administrative staff. Crawford received the award at the well- attended ceremony in Jamaica. Recognition Professor Rose-Marie Belle Antoine Professor of Labour Law and Offshore Financial Law • Elected First Director of the new Special Unit on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights – Organization of American States (OAS). • Cited publicly at the OAS Assembly April Meeting for Appreciation for Work done in the drafting of the American Convention Against Racism and Discrimination. • Appointed Dean, Faculty of Law, St. Augustine Campus, to commence academic year 2013-2014. • Cited with approval in the case of Ming & anor. v the Minister for Education and anor. [2012] SC (Bda) 39 Civ (1 August Vice-Chancellor Professor E. Nigel Harris with Professor Rose-Marie Belle Antoine. 2012). Professor Sir Hilary Beckles Pro-Vice Chancellor and Principal • Appointed Chairman, Caribbean, • Appointed Vice-President and Council Reparation Commission. Member: Commonwealth Sports Ministers • Appointed, Member, the Barbados Advisory Body on Sports (CABOS) National Commission on Reparation. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 78 S A L U T I N G A C H I E V E M E N T S Professor Anselm Hennis, Director, Chronic Disease Research Centre (right) with other recipients of the 2012 Anthony N Sabga Caribbean Award for Excellence. Mr Sampson, Professor Anselm Hennis Senior Lecture, • Received the 2012 Anthony N. Sabga Faculty of Law Caribbean Award of Excellence in Sciences and Technology. He shared the honour with UWI St Augustine Dr Dave Chadee. Mr Sampson Owusu • Mr Owusu’s book Commonwealth Caribbean Land Law has been cited or referred to in 12 judgments, including the Privy Council advice in Gopaul (HV Holdings Ltd) v Baksh [2012] All ER (D) 67 and the Caribbean Dr Emma Court of Justice judgment in Bisnauth v Smith, Lecturer, Shewprashad (2009) 79 WIR 339 [2009] Department of CCJ 8 (AJ). Biological and Chemical Sciences Dr Emma Smith • Appointed as Expert for the United Nations regular process for global reporting and assessment of the state of the marine environment, including socio- economic aspects (SBRC collaboration). Professor Eddy Ventose • Appointed Campus Coordinator Professor Eddy Ventose, of Graduate Studies. Professor of Law The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 79 Campus Staff PROMOTIONS, NEW APPOINTMENTS, TEMPORARY APPOINTMENTS AND RESIGNATIONS AS AT DECEMBER 31, 2013 PROMOTIONS Mr Kenneth Chase Dr Peter Adams Dr Yasodananda Kumar Areti Promoted to Librarian II Promoted to Senior Lecturer Promoted to Professor Sidney Martin Library Faculty of Medical Sciences Department of Computer Science, Mathematics and Physics NEW APPOINTMENTS Dr Jacqueline William Senior Lecturer Mrs Dale Lynch Dr Janice Jules Faculty of Medical Sciences Director Lecturer Office of Student Services Department of Language. Linguistics Dr Sharon Gopaul-McNicol and Literature Senior Lecturer Mr Andrew Millington Department of Government, Senior Lecturer Mr Jason Seigel Sociology and Social Work Errol Barrow Centre for Creative Junior Research Fellow Imagination Department of Language. Linguistics Dr Alana Griffith and Literature Lecturer Dr Desrine Bogle Department of Government, Lecturer Dr Hélène Zamor Sociology and Social Work Department of Language. Linguistics and Lecturer Literature Department of Language. Linguistics Mrs Thérèse James and Literature Lecturer Dr Keisha Evans Department of Government, Lecturer Dr Verna Knight Sociology and Social Work Department of Language. Linguistics and Assistant Lecturer Literature School of Education Dr Debra Joseph Lecturer Dr Nicola Hunte Dr Dawn Grosvenor Department of Government, Lecturer Lecturer Sociology and Social Work Department of Language. Linguistics and Faculty of Medical Sciences Literature Mrs Kay Thompson Dr Reginald King Senior Programme Officer Lecturer Quality Assurance Unit Faculty of Medical Sciences The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 80 C A M P U S S TA F F TEMPORARY APPOINTMENTS Campus IT Services Office of Student Services School of Education Mr Corey Hinds Ms Don-Marie Holder Dr J Deanne Ford Information Technologist Career Counselling Specialist/Internship Lecturer Coordinator Office of the Deputy Principal Errol Barrow Centre for Creative Ms Kerri-Ann Haynes-Knight University of the West Indies HIV&AIDS Imagination Project Officer Response Programme (UWI/HARP) Ms DeCarla Applewhaite Ms Kileha Anderson Producer Sidney Martin Library Research Assistant Dr Augustin Hatar Ms Sonia Bowen Ms Carmeta Douglin Senior Lecturer Librarian I Project Officer FACULTY OF LAW Mrs Alicia Payne FACULTY OF HUMANITIES Ms Jill St George Senior Library Assistant AND EDUCATION Research Fellow Mrs Sandra Thomas Mr Alvin Carter Ms Lana Ashby Senior Library Assistant Instructor Lecturer Ms Fay Thompson Ms Sophia Edwards Ms Alana Lancaster Senior Library Assistant Instructor Lecturer Ms Ann Fergusson Quality Assurance Programme Ms Karen Tesheira Instructor Senior Lecturer Mrs Andrea Burnett Mr Anthony Lewis Research Associate Instructor Law Library Office of the Principal Mr Samuel Soyer Ms Sheldine Greene Instructor Senior Library Assistant Ms Amarel Collymore Dr Allison Ramsay Instructor Lecturer FACULTY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Ms Shernell Joe Dr Sean Bernstein Teaching Assistant Department of History and Philosophy Lecturer Mrs Janice Parizeau Dr Tara Inniss Dr Asha Pemberton-Gaskin Instructor Lecturer Lecturer Ms Roxanne Burton Academy of Sports Dr Alan Smith Lecturer Lecturer Mr Rudolph Alleyne Dr Rodney Worrell Academic Coordinator Dr Hugh Thomas Lecturer Lecturer Mr Floyd Reifer Dr Anique Atherley Head Coach Department of Language, Linguistics Mr Kevin Grant and Literature Research Assistant Operations Manager Dr Porfirio Furé Davis Chronic Disease Research Centre Lecturer Mr Andre Greenidge Office of Planning and Development Ms Leiddy Chaves Fuentes Research Assistant Mr Mitch Hartman Teaching Assistant Development Officer Ms Deicy Villarraga Clavijo Teaching Assistant The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 81 FACULTY OF SCIENCE AND Ms Tracey Broome TECHNOLOGY Research Assistant Retirements Mr John Burnett Department of Biological and Lecturer Mrs Jacqueline Wade Chemical Sciences Campus Registrar Dr Robertine Chaderton Ms Angela Carrington-Dyall Senior Lecturer Mr Philip Gilkes Lecturer Mrs Stacey Estwick Senior Information Technologist Dr Vince Payne Lecturer Campus IT Services Teaching Assistant Dr Glenda Gay Professor Sunday Iyare Mrs Tessa King-Inniss Lecturer Professor Assistant Lecturer Department of EconomicsMs Nicole Knight-Arthur Lecturer Mrs Amparo McWatt Centre for Resource Management and Mr Kemaul Persaud Senior Lecturer Environmental Studies (CERMES) Lecturer Department of Language, Linguistics and Ms Katherine Blackman LiteratureDr Paul Pounder Research Assistant Lecturer Dr Jerome Jones Senior Lecturer Dr Alfred Walkes FACULTY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES Faculty of Medical Sciences Lecturer Mr Adrian Glean Mrs Diana Weekes-Marshall Mr Peter Gibbs Research Assistant Lecturer Senior Lecturer & Dean Faculty of Science and Technology Department of Economics Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social and Dr Judy Whitehead Ms Prosper Bangayo-Skeete Economic Studies (SALISES) Acting Director Lecturer Ms Annette Greene Sir Arthur Lewis Institute of Social and Mr Anderson Elcock Research Assistant Economic Studies Lecturer Ms Jacqueline Moniquette Resignations Senior Programme Officer Department of Government, Quality Assurance Unit Sociology and Social Work Dr Penelope Moore Ms Ayodele Harper Lecturer Research Assistant School of Education Principal’s Mr Chatoyer Bobb Dr Jacqueline Conley Teaching Assistant Lecturer Ms Gina Griffith Department of Government, Sociology and Award for Lecturer Social Work Dr Sandra Franklin-Hamilton Dr Tania Hoser Excellence Lecturer Lecturer Dr Cecilia Karch-Brathwaite Errol Barrow Centre for Creative 2013/2014 Senior Lecturer Imagination Mrs Felicia Robinson Dr Carmen Hutchinson Mrs Patricia Atherley Lecturer Research Assistant Mrs Gale Hall Institute of Gender and Development Ms Betty Thorpe Department of Management Studies Studies: Nita Barrow Unit Dr Grace Fayombo Mr Terry Harris Mrs Cheryl Small Dr Aaron Kamugisha Assistant Lecturer Librarian II Dr Leah Garner-O’Neale Sidney Martin Library The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 82 A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 Statistics and Charts On-Campus Student Registration by Faculty 2003/2004 - 2013-2014 Undergraduates and Postgraduates Humanities Medical Science and Social Year Law Total & Education Sciences Technology Sciences 2003/2004 1213 348 65 970 2308 4904 2004/2005 1371 372 68 1037 2936 5784 2005/2006 1407 402 81 1065 3259 6214 2006/2007 1374 480 79 1087 3698 6718 2007/2008 1568 479 94 1079 4091 7311 2008/2009 1433 517 164 1144 4523 7781 2009/2010 1410 611 188 1240 4894 8343 2010/2011 1372 686 271 1216 5129 8674 2011/2012 1330 671 337 1270 5233 8841 2012/2013 1193 686 384 1250 5263 8776 2013/2014 1205 751 421 1218 5039 8634 * Humanities includes School of Education and Gender & Development Studies. * The above totals exclude enrolment in tertiary level institutions. * Figures include certificates, licentiates and diplomas. On Campus Student Registration By Faculty 2003/2004 - 2013/2014 On Campus Student Registration By Faculty 2003/2004 - 2013/2014 On Campus Student Registration By Faculty 2003/2004 - 2013/2014 10000 Humanities & 9010000 00 Education 8000 Humanities & 9000 LawE ducation 700800 00 600700 MedLiacwal Sciences 00 500600 00 ScieMnceed iacnadl Sciences 400500 00 Technology 300400 Science and 00 2000 SocTiael cShcnieonlocegsy 3000 100200 00 TotSaol cial Sciences 100 00 Total 0 Years of Registration Years of Registration Distribution of Total On-Campus Degree Student Registration By Faculty 2013/2014 Distribution of Total On-Campus Degree Student Registration By Faculty 2013/2014 Social Sciences S5o8c.i3al6 S%c iences 58.36% Science and Technology Humanities & Education Scienc1e4 a.1n0% Human 1i3t.i9e5s %& d Technology Education 14.10% 13.95% Med.Sci Law 4.87% 8.69% Med.Sci Law 4.87% 8.69% The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus Enrolment Enrolment 2003/2004 2003/2004 2004/2005 2004/2005 2005/2006 2005/2006 2006/2007 2006/2007 2007/2008 2007/2008 2008/2009 2008/2009 2009/2010 2009/2010 2010/2011 2010/2011 2011/2012 2011/2012 2012/2013 2012/2013 2013/2014 2013/2014 A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 83 Distribution of Degree Student Registration by Country of Origin and Faculty UNDERGRADUATE POSTGRADUATE Grand Faculty Bdos NCC* T&T Jca Others Total Bdos NCC* T&T Jca Others Total Total Humanities & 817 57 17 2 53 946 207 24 11 4 13 259 1205 Education Law 229 114 140 143 9 635 26 10 69 7 4 116 751 Medical Sciences 172 19 119 0 1 311 89 10 1 1 9 110 421 Science and 931 89 31 14 8 1073 92 29 8 7 9 145 1218 Technology Social Sciences 4010 287 79 8 39 4423 446 102 45 7 16 616 5039 Total 6159 566 386 167 110 7388 860 175 134 26 51 1246 8634 * - NCC = Non-Campus Teritories * The postgraduate figure for Humanities includes a figure of 12 for Gender & Development Studies. * Undergraduate degrees include certificates, licentiates and diplomas. Distribution of Total On-Campus Degree Student Registration By Faculty 2013/2014 Distribution of Total On-Campus Degree Student Registration by Faculty 2013/2014 Social Sciences 58.36% Science and Technology 14.10% Humanities & Education 13.95% Distribution of Undergraduate Degree Students by Country 2013/2014 Medical Sciences Law 4.87% 8.69% Distribution of Undergraduate Degree Students by Country 2013/2014 Barbados, 6159 Jamaica, 167 Other, 110 Trinidad, 386 NCC, 566 The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 84 S TAT I S T I C S A N DDi stCribHuAtioRnT oSf Undergraduate Degree Students by Faculty 2013/2014 Distribution of Undergraduate Degree Students by Faculty 2013/2014 Social Sciences 4423 Humanities 946 Science and Technology 1073 Medical Sciences 311 Law 635 Registration of Postgraduate Degree Students by Faculty/ School and Country of Origin 2013/2014 Science Humanities Gender Medical Social Country Law and Total & Education Studies Sciences Sciences Technology M F T M F T M F T M F T M F T M F T M F T Anguilla 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 Antigua 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 8 8 16 9 8 17 Bahamas 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 3 4 0 0 0 0 4 4 0 2 2 2 10 12 Barbados 56 143 199 1 7 8 8 18 26 22 67 89 52 40 92 133 313 446 272 588 860 Belize 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 3 5 35 40 7 38 45 Bermuda 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 2 2 Brit. Vir. Is. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 3 3 Dominica 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 7 7 1 5 6 3 13 16 Grenada 2 1 3 0 0 0 0 2 2 1 0 1 1 1 2 2 2 4 6 6 12 Jamaica 1 3 4 0 0 0 2 5 7 0 1 1 3 4 7 2 5 7 8 18 26 St. Kitts/Nevis 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 2 2 2 2 4 St. Lucia 2 8 10 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 5 6 1 3 4 5 12 17 10 29 39 St. Vincent 1 3 4 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 4 7 4 7 11 8 15 23 Trinidad 1 10 11 0 1 1 25 44 69 0 1 1 1 7 8 11 34 45 38 97 135 Turks & Caicos 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Other * 4 8 12 0 1 1 2 2 4 3 6 9 4 5 9 0 16 16 13 38 51 Total 69 178 247 1 11 12 40 76 116 29 81 110 68 77 145 171 445 616 378 868 1246 * - may include one or more from each of the following Countries; Canada, USA, India, Nigeria, France, Ghana, Panama, Guyana, Tanzania, Dominican Republic, Guadelopue, United Kingdom, Brazil, Columbia, Costa Rica, Denmark, Suriname. * The postgraduate figure include a figure of 12 for Gender & Development studies. The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus Distribution of On Campus Post Graduate Degree Student Registration by Country of Origin 2013/2014 A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 85 Distribution of On Campus Post Graduate Degree Student Registration by Country of Origin 2013/2014 Jamaica, 26 Trinidad, 135 Barbados, 860 NCC, 174 Other, 51 Comparison of Growth In Total Undergraduate Degree Enrolment By Faculty 1999/2000 - 2013/2014 Comparison of Growth In Total Undergraduate Degree Enrolment by Faculty 1999/2000 – 2012/2013 5000 Humanities and 4500 Education 4000 3500 Law 3000 2500 Medical Sciences 2000 1500 Science and 1000 Technology 500 0 Social Sciences Year N.B Please note that the figures above are for undergraduate degress only and therefore exclude certificates, diplomas and licentiates. Enrolment 1999-2000 2000-2001 2001-2002 2002-2003 2003-2004 2004-2005 2005-2006 2006-2007 2007/2008 2008/2009 2009-2010 2010-2011 2011-2012 2012-2013 2013-2014 The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 86 S TAT I S T I C S A N D C H A RT S EXAMINATION RESULTS BY FACULTY AND TYPE FOR 2013 ... ... WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR 2012 FACULTY UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMMES POST GRADUATE PROGRAMMES GRAND TOTAL First Class Upper 2nd Lower 2nd **Pass Dist Total 2013 Total 2012 PHD/DM MPHIL MAST EMBA ADV DIP Total 2013 Total 2012 2013 2012 Humanities & 41 67 97 36 0 241 226 10 0 36 0 41 87 97 328 323 Education Law 12 46 105 50 0 213 225 0 0 32 0 7 39 62 252 287 Medical 0 0 0 37 3 40 24 2 0 9 0 3 14 17 54 41 Sciences Sciences and 21 33 83 59 0 196 184 4 9 30 0 1 44 28 240 212 Technology Social Sciences 81 201 357 134 0 773 758 0 1 160 39 35 235 166 1008 924 GraCnod mToptaarlison of1 5G5rowth in34 T7otal Un6d4e2rgraduat3e16 Degree 3Enrolme1n4t6 3by Coun14t1r7y 16 10 267 39 87 419 370 1882 1787 1999/2000-2013/2014 Comparison of Growth in Total Undergraduate Degree Enrolment by Country 1999/2000-2013/2014 7000 6000 Barbados 5000 Jamaica 4000 Trinidad and Tobago 3000 NCC 2000 Other 1000 0 Year Enrolment Total Year On-Campus Student Undergraduate Postgraduate Enrolment Registration Over 1999/2000 3132 863 3995 The Last 13 Years 2000/2001 3181 719 3900 1999/2000 - 2012/2013 2001/2002 3497 485 3982 2002/2003 3777 586 4363 2003/2004 4316 588 4904 2004/2005 5045 739 5784 2005/2006 5566 648 6214 2006/2007 6163 672 6835 2007/2008 6530 781 7311 2008/2009 6831 950 7781 2009/2010 7338 1005 8343 2010/2011 7582 1092 8674 2011/2012 7732 1109 8841 2012/2013 7529 1247 8776 2013/2014 7388 1246 8634 The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus Enrolment 1999-2000 2000-2001 2001-2002 2002-2003 2003-2004 2004-2005 2005-2006 2006-2007 2007/2008 2008/2009 2009-2010 2010-2011 2011-2012 2012-2013 2013-2014 A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 87 EXAMINATION RESULTS BY FACULTY AND TYPE FOR 2013 ... ... WITH COMPARATIVE TOTALS FOR 2012 FACULTY UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMMES POST GRADUATE PROGRAMMES GRAND TOTAL First Class Upper 2nd Lower 2nd **Pass Dist Total 2013 Total 2012 PHD/DM MPHIL MAST EMBA ADV DIP Total 2013 Total 2012 2013 2012 Humanities & 41 67 97 36 0 241 226 10 0 36 0 41 87 97 328 323 Education Law 12 46 105 50 0 213 225 0 0 32 0 7 39 62 252 287 Medical 0 0 0 37 3 40 24 2 0 9 0 3 14 17 54 41 Sciences Sciences and 21 33 83 59 0 196 184 4 9 30 0 1 44 28 240 212 Technology Social Sciences 81 201 357 134 0 773 758 0 1 160 39 35 235 166 1008 924 Grand Total 155 347 642 316 3 1463 1417 16 10 267 39 87 419 370 1882 1787 Total Year Male Female On-Campus Student Enrolment Registration Over 1999/2000 1425 2570 3995 The Last 13 Years 2000/2001 1321 2579 3900 1999/2000 - 2012/2013 2001/2002 1310 2672 3982 2002/2003 1436 2927 4363 2003/2004 1589 3315 4904 2004/2005 1874 3910 5784 2005/2006 1948 4266 6214 2006/2007 2193 4642 6835 2007/2008 2310 5001 7311 2008/2009 2495 5286 7781 2009/2010 2688 5655 8343 2010/2011 2778 5896 8674 2011/2012 2800 6041 8841 2012/2013 2787 5989 8776 2013/2014 2775 5859 8634 Growth of Total On-Campus Registration By Level 1999/2000 - 2013/2014 Growth of Total On-Campus Registration by Level 1999/2000 - 2013/2014 10000 9000 8000 Undergraduates 7000 6000 Post Graduates 5000 4000 3000 Total 2000 1000 0 Registration Year Enrolment 1999/2000 2000/2001 2001/2002 2002/2003 2003/2004 2004/2005 2005/2006 2006/2007 2007/2008 2008/2009 2009/2010 2010/2011 2011/2012 2012/2013 2013/2014 The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 88 S TAT I S T I C S A N D C H A RT S Registration of International Students for 2013/2014 with comparative figures for 1999/2000 – 2012/2013 1999- 2000- 2001- 2002- 2003- 2004- 2005- 2006- 2007- 2008- 2009- 2010- 2011- 2012- 2013- Country 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Angola Australia 1 1 1 1 0 1 2 1 2 0 0 1 1 Bangladesh 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Bermuda 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 Bolivia 1 1 1 1 Botswana 2 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Brazil 3 1 2 2 Canada 1 3 2 4 7 4 3 1 3 9 5 17 14 17 21 China 1 1 1 2 2 0 0 0 Columbia 1 0 0 2 Congo 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Costa Rica 1 1 0 0 Cuba 2 0 0 0 Denmark 2 2 2 3 Dominican 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 Republic Dutch 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 2 5 England 2 4 4 2 1 3 3 3 6 9 7 9 8 9 12 Fiji Islands 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Finland 4 5 4 2 France 2 2 3 3 Ghana 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 Germany 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 Guadeloupe 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 Haiti 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 India 1 3 4 4 1 5 4 3 3 4 4 3 1 2 1 Iran 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Italy 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Kenya 1 2 4 2 4 3 4 2 2 2 1 Martinique 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Mexico 1 1 1 1 Nicaragua 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 Nigeria 2 5 2 6 8 9 8 6 7 5 5 7 8 6 Pakistan 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Panama 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 Papua New Guinea 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 Scotland 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Sierra Leone 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 South Africa 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 Suriname 2 2 0 1 1 0 2 2 2 2 1 0 0 Swaziland 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 Sweden 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 2 3 3 Switzerland 1 0 0 0 Tanzania 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 Uganda 3 1 1 1 0 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 U.S.A. 3 4 4 6 4 2 7 6 23 46 34 40 36 28 Venezuela 1 1 0 0 0 0 32 27 25 0 28 Zimbabwe 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Other 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 6 63 49 48 39 35 Total 19 33 30 29 32 36 35 34 44 70 178 178 172 137 161 Countries within “other” include Guyana, Belgium, Norway, St Maarten and Western Samoa The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus Growth of Total On Campus Registration A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 89 by Gender 1999/2000 - 2013/2014 Growth of Total On Campus Registration by Gender 1999/2000 – 2013/2014 7000 6000 5000 4000 Male 3000 Female 2000 1000 0 Registration Year Distribution of On-campus Student Registration by Faculty and Gender Graduates & Undergraduates 2013/2014 Faculty Male Female Full Time Part Time Total FT/PT Total M/F Humanities & Education 325 880 508 697 1205 1205 Law 214 537 604 147 751 751 Med.Sci 117 304 404 17 421 421 Science and Technology 670 548 828 390 1218 1218 Social Sciences 1449 3590 2568 2471 5039 5039 Total Distributi2o7n7 5of On Ca5m85p9us Underg4r9a1d2uate/Post3g7r2a2duate Degr8e6e3s4 8634 Student Registration by Status 2013/2014 Distribution of On Campus Undergraduate/Postgraduate Degrees Student Registration by Status 2013/2014 Part Time Full Time 43.1% 56.9% Enrolment 1999/2000 2000/2001 2001/2002 2002/2003 2003/2004 2004/2005 2005/2006 2006/2007 2007/2008 2008/2009 2009/2010 2010/2011 2011/2012 2012/2013 2013/2014 The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus Distribution of On Campus Undergraduate/Postgraduate Registration 90 S TAT I S T I C S A N D C H A RT S By Gender 2013/2014 Distribution of On Campus Undergraduate/Postgraduate Registration by Gender 2013/2014 4000 3500 3000 2500 Male 2000 1500 Female 1000 500 0 Humanities & Law Medical Science and Social Sciences Education Sciences Technology Faculties On Campus Student Registration by Faculty and Status 2013/2014 On Campus Student Registration by Faculty and Status 2013/2014 3000 2568 2471 2500 Full time 2000 1500 Part Time 828 1000 508 697 604 404 390 500 147 17 0 Humanities & Law Medical Science and Social Sciences Education Sciences Technology Faculties The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus No.of Students No.of Students A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 91 Benefactors PRIVATE BCPS Cytology and Pathology Digicel Services Eastern Caribbean Central Bank, INDIVIDUALS BHL Group St. Kitts-Nevis Dr Paul Altman BICO Ernst & Young Caribbean Ms Anna Beckles British American Tobacco Company GEMS of Barbados Mr Richard P. Brown Jr Esq Cable & Wireless (Barbados Ltd) Gildan Active Wear Mr Andrew Bynoe Carasco & Son Ltd Goddard Enterprises Ltd Mr Edmund Cohen Caribbean Call Centre, Government of Barbados Mr Eddie Edghill Neal and Massy Guardian Holdings Ltd/Guardian Ms Anita Guidos Caribbean Centre for General Insurance Monetary Studies Ms Yvette Wallace Innotech Services Limited Caribbean Development Bank Dr Annette Woodroffe Insurance Corporation of Caribbean Financial Services Barbados Ltd Corporation Life of Barbados LOCAL AND Caribbean Natural Resources Lee’s Bistro and Catering Services REGIONAL Institute, St. Lucia Lloyd Erskine Sandiford Conference Caribbean Policy Development and Cultural Centre DONORS Centre, Barbados Nation Publishing Company Carlisle Laboratories Accra Beach Hotel and Resorts McEnearney Alton (Barbados) Ltd CARICOM Secretariat Air Jamaica Miller Publishing Cave Shepherd & Co. Ltd Allycoz Creations Ministry of Social Transformation Central Bank of Barbados Almond Resort Inc. (Barbados) Challenge Creative Arts Attorney General of Belize Mobile and Marine Systems Ltd and Training Society Barbados Business Machines Nation Publishing Company CIBC FirstCaribbean Barbados Chamber of Commerce Peter Moores Barbados TrustInternational Bank Barbados Mutual Life Assurance Pine Hill DairyCLICO International Life Society Insurance Ltd Price Waterhouse Coopers Barbados National Terminal Co. Ltd Coconut Court Beach Resort RBC Royal Bank of Canada Barbados Shipping and Collins Ltd Sagicor Life Incorporated Trading Co. Ltd Creative Junction Scotiabank (Barbados) Barbados Tourism Authority Diagnostic Radiology Service Scotia Insurance (B’dos) Ltd The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 92 B E N E F A C TO R S Shell Antilles & Guianas Ltd. Inter-American Investment United Nations, New York Spectrol Medical Laboratories Inc. Corporation US Agency for International T. Geddes Grant International Development Development Research Council The Institute of Internal Auditors, World Health Organisation, Barbados Chapter International Foundation for Geneva Sciences (Sweden) Tourism Development World Trade Organization Corporation, Barbados Leverhulme Trust (UK) Williams Industries Ltd MacArthur Foundation SCHOLARSHIPS, Women in Development Fund Marine Turtle Conservation Fund Microsoft Corporation AWARDS AND INTERNATIONAL National Research Council, USA PRIZES New York based Universal Books DONORS 1948 Medical SocietyOcean Fund of Royal Adith Brown Memorial Trust Australian High Commission Caribbean Cruises American Foundation for the Bank of Canada OAK Foundation UWI Scholarships Bank of Nova Scotia PAHO Anguilla Bar Association Barclays Bank Peter Moores Foundation Anthony & Joy Bland Charitable British High Commission Phytophram Plc, Cambridge Trust Scholarship Canada Caribbean Gender Population Action International, USA Antigua Commercial Bank Equality Fund Princeton University, UISA Apostolic Teaching Centre Prize Canadian Aid (CIDA/CTAP) Rockefeller Foundation Arnott Cato Foundation Canadian High Commission Sciences and Engineering Bahamas Supermarkets Foundation Certified Management Research Council of Canada Barbados Association of Medical Accountants (Nova Scotia) The Amberstone Trust Practitioners Commonwealth Secretariat The Futures Group Barbados Association of Earthwatch Institute International, USA Psychiatrists Prize Edward Elgar Publishing The National Academies, USA Barbados Association of Retired Embassy of Colombia The Population Council, USA Persons Embassy of the United States The Research Institute for Barbados Bar Association Prize of America the Study of Man Barbados Business Machines Embassy of Venezuela The World Bank Barbados Chamber of Commerce European Development Fund UNECLAC and Industry Scholarship Ford Foundation UNESCO Barbados Community Foundation Scholarship Global Economic Monitor UNIFEM United Nations Development Barbados Economic Society PrizeGovernment of the Republic of the Netherlands Programme Barbados Employers’ Confederation Inter-American Development Bank United Nations Environment Scholarship Programme The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus A N N U A L R E P O RT 2 0 1 2 - 1 3 93 Barbados External Chancellor’s Prize in Trade Edmund Cohen Scholarship Telecommunications Ltd Union Law Edmund Hinkson Prize in Barbados Government Scholarships/ Charles Duncan O’Neal Lodge Poverty Law Exhibitions/Bursaries No. 1720 Elsa Goveia Graduate Scholarship Barbados International Business Charles M. Kennedy Prize Enherent Barbados Limited Association Bursaries Chefette Restaurants Scholarships Equity Insurance Ltd Scholarship Barbados Investment & Development Christopher Blackman Q. C. Prize Ernst & Young Scholarship Corporation CIBC FirstCaribbean International European Development Fund Barbados Mutual Life Assurance Bank Scholarships Society Scholarship European Union Cidel Bank & Trust Barbados National Bank Fenton Ramsahoye CLICO Holdings (Barbados) Barbados Olympic Association Florida Caribbean Cruise AssociationLtd Scholarship Scholarship Frances Simmons Prize Colin and Pearl Kirton Barbados Public Workers’ Prize in Theology Frederick E. Kelsick Memorial Prize Co-operative Credit Union Ltd Combermere School PTA Goddard Enterprises Ltd Scholarship Scholarship Commonwealth Fund Technical Government of Spain Barbados Shipping & Trading Cooperation Co. Ltd Scholarships Grace Kennedy Foundation (Jamaica) Consolidated Finance Barbados Workers’ Union Graham Gooding Prize in Biology Co-operative Credit Union Ltd Continuing Medical Education Helen Carnegie Prize for Scholarship Committee Creative Arts Brenda Lewis Memorial Prize Coopers and Lybrand Herman C. Stoute Memorial British American Tobacco David Nathaniel King Memorial Scholarship (Barbados) Ltd Scholarship Ian Walcott Memorial Prize British Development Division Department for International Institute of Chartered Accountants Development Scholsarships BWIA of Barbados Scholarship District Grand Lodge of Barbados Cable and Wireless (Barbados) Ltd Insurance Corporation of Barbados Scholarship Ltd Scholarship Campus Boyz Entertainment Dr Harry Bayley & Dr Anne Bayley Bursary International Lawyers and Memorial Prize Economists Against Poverty Canadian Airways Dr Lionel Stuart Memorial Prize Irvin Burgie Memorial Prize Canadian AID (CIDA/CTAP) Dr Maisha Emmanuel Island Heritage Insurance Scholarship Caribbean Development Bank Dr & Mrs Kerr J. M. G. M. Adams Memorial CARICOM Climate Change Centre Dr The Hon Sir Richard Cheltenham, Scholarship CARICOM Fisheries Resource Q.C. Scholarship Jack Dear Q. C. Memorial Prize Assessment & Management Dr Trevor Carmichael, Q.C. Programme John Reinecke Memorial Prize Dunn Cox & Orrett Carrington & Sealy Scholarship Joseph Luckhoo Memorial Prize Eastern Caribbean Central Bank Central Bank of Barbados Joseph S. Archibald Q. C. Scholarships Eastern Caribbean Group of Memorial Prize Companies Scholarship The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus 94 B E N E F A C TO R S Justice Nicholas Liverpool Pricesmart (Barbados) Scholarship Stokes & Bynoe Ltd Prize Memorial Prize Price Waterhouse Coopers Sylvia Gore Moseley Kemlin Laurence Memorial Prize Scholarship Memorial Scholarship KPMG PRT (Barbados) Ltd Systems Consulting Ltd Prizes Kurleigh King Memorial Scholarship R.L. Seale & Co. Ltd Prize Tamarack Foundation Award Life of Barbados Scholarship Ralph Boyce Scholarship Tastee Ltd Prize Lionel Stuart Memorial Prize Ray Hackey Scholarship Telford Georges Memorial Llewellyn Rock Memorial Prize Royal Ivey Publishing Prize Scholarship Louis A. Lynch Memorial Scholarship St. Leonards School Old Scholars Texaco Foundation Scholarships Lyford Cay Foundation Sanga international Inc. Prize Time Henry Kendal Q.C. Memorial Prize Mendes Boyd Scholarship Sagicor Life Inc. Thorne de la Bastide Prize in Merck, Sharpe & Dohme Prize Sagicor Financial Corporation Prize Constitutional Law Moore Paragon (Caribbean) Sagicor International Inc. Prize Total Technology Solutions Ltd Prize Scotiabank (Barbados) Ltd United Nations Environment Mokiman Prize for Part-time/ Scholarship Programme Evening Students Scotiabank Eastern Caribbean UWI Alumni Association Molly Reid Prize (Grenada) Ltd Scholarship (Barbados Chapter) Prize Myers, Fletcher & Gordan Prize Scotiabank Eastern Caribbean UWI Alumni Association Moore Paragon Prize (St. Lucia) Ltd Scholarship (New York Chapter – National Commercial Bank of SHELL Antilles & Guianas Ltd Rex Nettleford Scholarship) Grenada Scholarship Scholarships UWI Alumni Association National Commercial Bank SHELL Western Supply & (Toronto Chapter) Award (SVG) Ltd Scholarship Trading Co. Ltd UWI Alumni Association National Union of Public Workers Sir Arnott Cato Memorial Prize (Washington Chapter) Award Nevis Cooperative Credit Union Sir Arthur Lewis Memorial UWI Alumni Circle Scholarships Orand Bahamas Port Authority (Cave Hill) Scholarship Sir Frank Walcott Memorial Grants Olton Springer Memorial UWI (Cave Hill) Co-op Scholarship Sir Frank Worrell Memorial Credit Union Ltd Scholarship Scholarships Organization of American States UWI Cricket Award Sir Fred Philips Memorial Prize Optimist Club of Ernst & Young UWI Regional Endowment (Dr Carol Jacobs Scholarship) Sir Gaston Johnson Memorial Prize Fund Scholarships P & R. Chad Ltd Prize Sir Hugh Springer Memorial Prize UWI Sports Awards PAHO Fellowship Action Sir Louis H. Lockhart Victor Cooke Prize Memorial Award Peat Marwick Prize Wendell McClean Memorial Prize Sir Maurice Byer Memorial Prize Pfizer Caribbean Prize WIGUT Travel Bursaries Society for Caribbean Linguistics Police Wives Association William Patterson Memorial Prize (Barbados) Awards SOL Group Inc Scholarships World Meteorological Organisation The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus