Abstract
Introduction: The CAPE Vulnerability Index is a global foreign policy index that identifies the countries to be prioritise for foreign aid. It offers an evidenced, structured and reasoned approach to using aid in bi-lateral agreements with mental health as a foundation. The present version is specifically design for Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region, which comprises of 33 countries.
Highlights
The CAPE Vulnerability Index [1] is a global foreign policy index that identifies the countries to be prioritise for foreign aid
What we can conclude with a great degree of certainty that the worst 12 scoring countries are possibly fragile states; countries where the Governments do not have complete control or authority, are often repressive and corrupt, participate in serious human rights abuses and are characterised by political instability of various forms, disadvantage by the extremes of climate changes, extreme poverty, inequality, social and ethnic divisions, unable to provide basic services and suffer from pockets of insurgency in the form of terrorism, which are often violent and brutal
From the current COVID-19 pandemic along with an increase in population to climate change, human‐made and natural disasters and ongoing conflicts leading to mass migration and increase in refugees and asylum seekers to the impact of climate change with droughts and floods, geopolitical factors are being recognized
Summary
The CAPE Vulnerability Index is a global foreign policy index that identifies the countries to be prioritise for foreign aid. The present version is design for Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region, which comprises of 33 countries. The CAPE Vulnerability Index [1] is a global foreign policy index that identifies the countries to be prioritise for foreign aid. It offers an evidenced, structured and reasoned approach to using aid in bi-lateral agreements with mental health as a foundation. The LAC region consists over 670,230,000 people as of 2016, and covers
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