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151 Multi-disciplinary research collaboration In order to expand the boundaries of gender research beyond the Centre for Gender and Development Studies and to integrate gender analysis into scholarship more widely at The UWI. we expanded into two main areas. The first Gender Environment and Natural Resource Use which included the actionresearch project The Nariva Swamp A Gendered Case Study carried out in collaboration with Dr. Grace Sirju-Charran plant biochemist of the Department of Life Sciences.This project sought to integrate gender analysis and therefore people as gendered beings into environmental studies and to develop among community members a sense of their role as custodians of this endangered wetland. A multi-disciplinary research team including five junior researchers drawn from agriculture economicspolitical sciencegender studies and ecology worked on this project. A direct outgrowth of this has been the Women Gender and Water Programme still on stream at the Institute of Gender and Development Studies and involving an interdiscipli- nary team of scholars led by Dr.Fredericka Deare Soil Scientist. An important component in these collaborative research projects in addition to academic publications has been work in communities influencing public policy social activism and the creation of public education materials including audio-visuals. The second area which is also still on-going is in the area of Gender and Sexualities. This often taboo research area has been contradictorily opened up to research funding through the HIV pandemic. This inter-disciplinary research programme Gender Sexualities and the Implications for HIV began in 2004. Phase 1 resulted in the production of an annotated bibliography an international conference which resulted in an edited collection and a preliminary qualitative study on attitudes taboos and behaviours related to sexuality among students at The UWI St. Augustine Campus.Phase II of this project focused on two major sub-projects. The first the action-research project Breaking the Silence Child Sexual Abuse a Multi-Sectoral Approach produced the following a study on the provision of services related to child sexual abuse and incest in Trinidad and Tobago a review of the Caribbean literature a review of the legislation related to child sexual abuse and incest in Trinidad and Tobago and a series of community interventions in three communities. The second project investigated sexual cultures in Trinidad and Tobago through an ethnographic study of Ariapita Avenue in Port of Spain and a qualitative study of sexual cultures among UWI students 18-30. These data are currently being analyzed for publication. Radical Caribbean Social and Feminist Thought Here I have sought to contribute to the recognition of a Carib- bean intellectual tradition. In particular I have focused on the praxis of Caribbean feminist and other radical intellectuals who have contributed to the anti-colonial and pan-Africanist movements. So far four articles have been published in this area and more are envisaged.In addition based on research for an article on Islamic women and mosque movements which is awaiting publication I plan a major work on the Trinidad and Tobago Islamic scholar Moulvi Ameer Ali. Selected Publications Roberts Dorothy Rhoda Reddock Dianne Douglas and Sandra Reid eds. Sex power and taboo Gender sexuality and HIV The Caribbean and beyond Kingston Jamaica Ian Randle Publishers 2009. Franois Elma. The NWCSA and the workers struggle for change in the Caribbean in the 1930s LondonNew Beacon Books1988. Reddock Rhoda. Women labour and politics in Trinidad and Tobago A history London Zed Books 1994 CHOICE Outstanding Academic Book1996.