CARICOM (Caribbean Community) - definitie. Wat is CARICOM (Caribbean Community)
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Wat (wie) is CARICOM (Caribbean Community) - definitie

ORGANISATION OF 15 CARIBBEAN NATIONS AND DEPENDENCIES
CARICOM; Caribbean Community and Common Market; Caricom; Caribbean community; Caribbean Community organs and bodies; List of the Caribbean Community organs and bodies; The Caribbean Community; The CARICOM; Caribbean Economic Community
  • [[Exclusive Economic Zones]] of the member states of the CARICOM. Considering them, the total area reaches the 2 300 297 km².

CARICOM         
· Caribbean Community
CARICOM         
['kar?k?m]
¦ abbreviation Caribbean Community and Common Market.
Trinidad and Tobago and CARICOM         
Trinidad and Tobago and Caribbean Community (CARICOM)
The nation of Trinidad and Tobago has been the leading supporter of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM). Trinidad and Tobago was one of the four members in 1973 which then along with Barbados, Guyana and Antigua and Barbuda moved to establish the organisation that today it known as the Caribbean Community and Common Market.

Wikipedia

Caribbean Community

The Caribbean Community (CARICOM or CC) is an intergovernmental organisation that is a political and economic union of 15 member states (14 nation-states and one dependency) throughout the Americas and Atlantic Ocean. They have primary objectives to promote economic integration and cooperation among its members, ensure that the benefits of integration are equitably shared, and coordinate foreign policy. The organisation was established in 1973, with its four founding members signing the Treaty of Chaguaramas. Its primary activities involve:

  • Coordinating economic policies and development planning.
  • Devising and instituting special projects for the less-developed countries within its jurisdiction.
  • Operating as a regional single market for many of its members (Caricom Single Market).
  • Handling regional trade disputes.

The secretariat headquarters is in Georgetown, Guyana. CARICOM is an official United Nations Observer beneficiary.

CARICOM was established by the English-speaking parts of the Caribbean and currently includes all the independent Anglophone island countries plus Belize, Guyana and Montserrat, as well as all other British Caribbean territories and Bermuda as associate members. English was its sole working language into the 1990s. The organisation became multilingual with the addition of Dutch-speaking Suriname in 1995 and the French- and Haitian Creole-speaking Haiti in 2002. Furthermore, it added Spanish as the fourth official language in 2003. In July 2012, CARICOM announced they considered making French and Dutch official languages. In 2001, the heads of government signed a revised Treaty of Chaguaramas that cleared the way to transform the idea of a common market CARICOM into the Caribbean (CARICOM) Single Market and Economy. Part of the revised treaty establishes and implements the Caribbean Court of Justice.