The recent announcement by CARICOM granting citizens of Barbados, Belize, Dominica, and St Vincent and the Grenadines the right to live and work freely across each other’s borders signifies a pivotal moment in the Caribbean’s long-standing vision of regional integration. However, this progressive step is overshadowed by significant structural challenges, particularly in the realms of data protection, privacy oversight, and the inconsistent definition of a ‘CARICOM citizen’ across member states.
The CARICOM governance paradox: Building free movement in a region without privacy
