KINGSTON, Jamaica, CMC – Prime Minister Andrew Holness is calling for conflict management to be included in the curricula of all schools across Jamaica.
Speaking to teachers and students at the Manchester High School late last week, Holness said conflict resolution and management principles are critical to violence reduction and prevention, particularly among youth.
He said a significant percentage of the shootings and murders are committed by young males under 24 years, adding that they are also predominantly the victims of violence.
“We have a problem with resolving conflicts… we have a problem with violence. But we also have a problem with our young men [being] in conflict and using violence [to resolve it] and being the victims of violence.
“Governments usually try not to get too involved in regulating households, even how they discipline children. But the social problems that we have have become so challenging, they are now at crisis proportion that the Government has to be direct and instrumental in dealing with this problem of violence in a frontal way,” the Prime Minister stated.
“We will have to incorporate the schools now to teach in the curriculum how to manage conflict deliberately. It will have to be a curriculum subject,” the Prime Minister emphasized.
The Jamaican leader also promised greater collaboration with the National Parenting Support Commission (NPSC) and educational institutions to reinforce the best principles of conflict resolution.
“There has to be a solid link between the home and the school. What is being taught in the schools must also be reinforced in the homes. So, yes, the two-pronged approach… we will be dealing with the schools directly about treating conflict and about dealing with violence and building peace; and through the National Parenting Support Commission, we will also be carrying this message to parents to see a transformation of our society,” he stated.
He encouraged the students to be Ambassadors for peace, noting that they would be instrumental to Jamaica’s continued growth and development.
“You are going to be the ones to inherit an adequately run and structured economy, and you are going to grow it. You will create the labor force that will attract the investment that will [transform] Jamaica into a first-world country. But on the other hand, we need good citizens. We need people who will respect the law.
We need people who will become good parents; we need people who will take a peaceful stance in resolving conflict. So as we have worked on the economy and building the country’s productivity, we must now work on the person, the human being,” he underscored.
Prime Minister Holness was joined on the visit to the school by Member of Parliament, Manchester Central, Rhoda Moy Crawford, and other stakeholders.