|  | Cheryl .Y. Joyette, [LLM, MSc. (LAER), BSc. (Hons), BDMS (Hons)]Position: Senior Administrative OfficerEmail Address: cjoyette@cimh.edu.bb Ms.  Cheryl joyette joined the team of the CIMH on the 1st January  2009.  She is trained in industrial  relations law, business law, international business law, international labour  law, organisational development, strategic management, human resource  management, collective bargaining and industrial relations.  Her main focus of study was employee  involvement in the workplace.  She has  worked with national and international auditors on project reporting and  organisational financials.  Mrs. Joyette  is experienced in implementing administrative systems to enhance efficiency and  productivity.Prior  to joining the CIMH, Mrs. Joyette was employed, for well over a decade, as Senior  Administrator with the Caribbean Policy Development Centre (CPDC), a regional  non-governmental organisation with a focus on people development and policies  to promote sustainable livelihoods in the region.  While there she maintained responsibility for  human resource matters, financial management and Secretariat oversight. She  also contributed to project development. Cheryl also volunteered her services  to the Community Development Foundation, a charitable entity, for five years in  the same capacity.
 Education:  
      University of the West Indies, Cave Hill campus.  Barbados Institute of Management and Productivity Awards:  Current Areas of Interests:  
      Labour and Business Law,  Labour History, the Black Jacobins – Haitian Revolution, 1971 – 1803, the West  Indies Royal Commission (Moyne Commission) Projects Initiated:  Research: 
      Dissertation: Employee Participation in BarbadosTrade Union and the Law: the  Issue of Acceptance or Accommodation of UnionismThe Ability Of Any Single  State To Regulate Employment Relations Is Challenged As The World Evolves  Toward A Single Economy In Which Capital, Commodities and In Many Cases Workers  Move Freely Across International Borders – A Critical DiscussionThe Implications of the CSME  for Employment Relations within the Caribbean CommunityWhat have been the dominant  legal policies impacting collective organisations and collective bargaining in  Britain with special emphasis on the period 1979 – 1999?  How have these policies impacted collective  organisation and collective bargaining in the British West Indies?Government, Business and  Society – The Relevance of the CSMEThe extent of success in the  implementation of global business regulation to guide the conduct of  multi-national corporations. Should these Regulations be incorporated in  national law? A Critical DiscussionGainsharing as a  Performance-Based Compensation StrategyOccupational Safety and Health  and the Environment: A Comparative Analysis of several regional legislations to  the CARICOM Model |