As an area that has fought for independence from colonialization and European powers, governments from CARICOM (Caribbean Communities Organization) countries provide funding to support the region's cultural practices for multiple reasons.
According to the CARICOM Regional Cultural Policy, the three main reasons for government funding toward cultural support include: to provide people who are trained in the arts and other areas of culture, to establish and maintain cultural preservation institutions, and to ensure proper management of cultural institutions and heritage.
Doing the aforementioned things will ensure that care is taken to preserve the cultural heritage of an area that has received much interaction and assimilation with world powers. This interaction can be threatening to the stability of cultural preservation by those who may be ignorant, and/or untrained, in the preservation important heritage factors. The CARICOM nations are also striving to maintain independence and ensure during the development process in developing Caribbean countries that they may remain self-sufficient.
Answer:
the right to vote in political elections.
Explanation:
Women's suffrage is the right of women to vote in elections. Beginning in the mid-19th century, aside from the work being done by women for broad-based economic and political equality and for social reforms, women sought to change voting laws to allow them to vote.
It helps create a stronger, more collectivist kind of environment, which is more successful, I believe, than individualist environments.
Reasons are supported by evidence