1. Barriteau, Eudine. "Engendering Development or Gender Mainstreaming? A Critical Assessment from the Commonwealth Caribbean." Feminist Perspectives on Gender and the World Bank. Eds. Edith Kuiper and Drucilla Barker. London: Routledge. Forthcoming December 2004.
2. Brown, Mark Malloch. Gender Mainstreaming at UNDP. UN New York, 23 September 2004.
This is a statement by Mark Malloch Brown, UNDP Administrator, to the UNDP/UNFPA Executive Board on gender mainstreaming at the UNDP.
Available via the UNDP website: http://www.undp.org/dpa/statements/administ/2004/september/23sept04.html
3. Commonwealth Secretariat. Gender Management System Handbook. June 1999
This document is available in pdf. format: http://www.unescobkk.org/gender/gender/documents/gender%20management%20system%20handbook.pdf.
4. Dodson, Debra. How to Create a Gender Balance in Political Decision-Making. Brussels: European Commission.
5. Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC). Study of Gender Mainstreaming in the Caribbean. Funded by the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA). 15 March 2000. This paper describes and analyzes gender mainstreaming in the Caribbean. The countries studied comprise Barbados, Belize, Guyana, Jamaica, Montserrat, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Suriname and Trinidad and Tobago. This report also focuses on the institutionalization of gender equity through an analysis of government activities, both administratively and in policy and programmes. The effectiveness and impact of such gender mainstreaming initiatives is also analyzed. This document is available in pdf format at http://www.eclac.cl/publicaciones/PortOfSpain/7/LCCARG607/carg0607.pdf
6. Griffith, Ivelaw L. Democracy and Governance in Jamaica: An Assessment.
Report prepared for Management Systems International and USAID. February 22, 2001.
This report explains and interprets some of the democracy and governance challenges facing Jamaica, with a view to suggesting areas USAID/Jamaica may consider in order to improve the nation’s governance climate. First, it sketches some of the dimensions of the four areas or critical concern to USAID/Jamaica – rule of law, elections, civil society, and local government – and outline the four variables forming the core of the assessment: consensus, rule of law, competition, inclusion and good governance. This document is available in pdf format: http://www.dec.org/pdf_docs/PNACN034.pdf
7. Massiah, Joycelin. Putting Gender on the Agenda: the Next Generation. Milroy Reece Memorial Lecture, Solidarity House, Barbados. 10 November 1999.
Lecture on putting gender on policymaking agendas.
8. Mohammed Patricia, Catherine Shepherd and Elsa Leo-Rhynie. Gender in Caribbean Development: Papers Presented at the Inaugural Seminar of the University of West Indies Women and Development Studies Project. UWI Press. 2002.
This book contains articles by Caribbean scholars and activists and reflects varying disciplinary approaches to women's studies. Beginning with gender and development theories, the book covers historical and conceptual feminism, analytical and methodological challenges of studying gender within the social sciences, women's literature and literary criticism. The book also examines ideology and culture, gender, race and class, gender issues in the family, gender in the labour market and the work of women's organizations.