ISSN: Pending Registration | DOI Prefix: Pending — Crossref | Open Access

Each focus area represents a strategic research priority for the Caribbean — not simply a topic category, but a domain where AI research can translate directly into policy action, economic opportunity, and resilience.

AI for Climate and Disaster Risk

The Caribbean is among the world's most climate-exposed regions. Small island states face disproportionate and compounding risks — hurricanes, storm surge, drought, sea-level rise — with limited infrastructure to absorb or recover from shocks. AI research in this domain has the potential to save lives, protect economies, and guide investment in resilience.

JCAIS publishes empirical and applied work that brings machine learning, remote sensing, and predictive analytics to bear on Caribbean climate and hazard systems.

Topics of Interest Include:

  • → Hurricane track and intensity prediction models
  • → Flood and storm surge risk mapping
  • → Composite climate risk scoring for SIDS
  • → Drought forecasting and agricultural impact modelling
  • → AI-enabled early warning and evacuation systems
  • → Post-disaster damage assessment using satellite imagery
  • → Climate-adjusted infrastructure planning
Aerial view of Caribbean island showing coastline
Caribbean urban financial district

AI in Finance, Insurance, and Economic Systems

Caribbean economies face persistent challenges: shallow capital markets, limited credit penetration, high-cost financial services, and exposure to external economic shocks. AI has the potential to extend financial access, price risk more accurately, and improve macroeconomic forecasting in ways tailored to small and open economies.

Topics of Interest Include:

  • → Alternative credit scoring for thin-file borrowers
  • → Parametric and index-based insurance design
  • → Sovereign debt and fiscal risk modelling
  • → Remittance and diaspora capital flow analysis
  • → Financial inclusion through mobile and digital platforms
  • → Tourism and commodity price forecasting
  • → Fraud detection in small financial systems

AI for Public Policy and Governance

Governments of small states operate with lean public services and face demands for efficiency and accountability that AI could meaningfully address. Research in this domain examines how AI tools can improve policy design, public administration, and regulatory effectiveness — while managing the risks of automated decision-making in settings with limited institutional safeguards.

Topics of Interest Include:

  • → AI-driven public service delivery optimisation
  • → Regulatory technology (RegTech) for small states
  • → Government readiness assessment frameworks
  • → Evidence-based policymaking using AI tools
  • → Automated decision-making accountability
  • → Tax compliance and revenue forecasting
  • → AI in public health systems
Caribbean governmental architecture
Caribbean market and small business

AI for Small Business and Informal Economies

A significant share of Caribbean economic activity occurs in small and micro businesses and in informal market structures. Research in this area investigates how AI tools can be practically deployed in these contexts — improving productivity, access to markets, supply chain visibility, and financial management — without requiring the scale or infrastructure assumed by most enterprise AI solutions.

Topics of Interest Include:

  • → AI tools for micro and small enterprise productivity
  • → Informal sector mapping and measurement
  • → Market demand forecasting for small traders
  • → Low-resource NLP for Caribbean creole contexts
  • → Agricultural AI for smallholder farmers
  • → Tourism SME analytics and personalisation
  • → Digital literacy and adoption barriers

AI Infrastructure, Data Systems, and Talent Development

A sovereign AI future for the Caribbean depends on foundational infrastructure: high-quality regional datasets, appropriate data governance frameworks, accessible compute, and a trained technical workforce. Research in this domain examines the conditions and investments required to build the ecosystem for Caribbean AI — and what can be done now under current constraints.

Topics of Interest Include:

  • → Regional data governance and ownership frameworks
  • → Open and curated Caribbean datasets
  • → Compute access strategies for small states
  • → AI talent development and education pipelines
  • → Caribbean AI benchmarks and evaluation standards
  • → Cloud strategy and digital sovereignty
  • → Inter-island data sharing mechanisms
Data infrastructure and technology

Researching Across These Themes?

JCAIS welcomes submissions from Caribbean-based scholars, diaspora researchers, and international researchers whose work directly addresses small-state AI contexts.

Submit Your Paper