WeTalking Digital Danger! Today, we explore how digital spaces are shaping Caribbean life, and how those same spaces are becoming sites of harm, exploitation, and gendered violence. This special 16 Days of Activism episode is grounded in the UN Women theme: End Digital Violence Against All Women and Girls.
Digital violence is more than online conflict.
It includes cyberbullying, online grooming, stalking, identity theft, fake profiles, unsolicited photos, blackmail, revenge imagery, and harmful content that reinforces dangerous ideas about masculinity, sexuality, and power. These forms of abuse are affecting children earlier than ever and are impacting how boys and girls learn about relationships, safety, and self-worth.
To unpack this urgent issue, we’re joined by regional experts:
Dr. Cona Husbands (Guyana), Colleen Wint-Bond (Jamaica), Peter Wickham (Barbados), and Stuart Shaw (Canada).
Each brings lived stories from schools, shelters, research, policing, youth work, and community programmes, revealing what digital violence looks like on the ground.
Together, we explore:
✨ real stories that show how early exposure and online risks shape young minds
✨ how harmful displays of masculinity are being learned and repeated through digital platforms
✨ the silence, stigma, and trust barriers that stop boys and girls from seeking help
✨ gaps in awareness, policing, reporting, and legislation
✨ the role of allyship—how men, parents, teachers, faith leaders, and communities can support prevention
✨ how we can all contribute to ending digital violence and building safer online cultures
This episode is honest, solution-oriented, and deeply rooted in the Caribbean experience.
Whether you’re a parent, teacher, youth worker, policymaker, or simply someone who cares, this conversation will help you better understand the digital world our children are navigating.
Join us as we amplify the call: End Digital Violence Against All Women and Girls.
Listen, learn, and share, because safer digital spaces start with all of us.