Child activist wants more emphasis placed on community parenting

A United Nations child rights authority has issued a stark warning regarding the powerful pull of negative community influences on Barbadian youth, advocating for an island-wide shift toward collective parenting responsibility. Faith Marshall-Harris, delivering the keynote address at a National Parenting Seminar in Bridgetown, revealed alarming insights from her direct work with at-risk teenagers, many of whom view illicit activities on the ‘block’ as their primary career path. The event, orchestrated by the Community Development Department, convened stakeholders to design a structured framework for community parenting and family-strengthening initiatives slated for national implementation by mid-2026. Marshall-Harris detailed how a pervasive ‘block culture’ offers adolescents not just income but a dangerous sense of structure and belonging, effectively competing with traditional education and family guidance. She emphasized that antisocial behavior is not innate but cultivated through systemic neglect, arguing that the community at large—not just parents at home—bears responsibility for shaping the next generation. The expert also confronted mounting misconceptions about children’s rights on the island, rejecting the notion that prioritizing young people’s welfare diminishes the rights of other vulnerable groups like the elderly. She dismissed claims linking children’s rights advocacy to increased youth violence, instead charging adults with the duty to teach balanced respect for both rights and responsibilities.