01833 a2200385 4500001001100000005001700011008004100028020002200069037003700091040000700128041000800135072001500143072001500158072001400173072001500187072001400202072001300216072001400229072001200243072001500255072001400270072002100284072002100305072002100326072002100347100002000368245004400388250000600432260003200438300001000470520090500480700002201385700002501407999001501432036769427120250328151429.0250324022025GB 24 eng  a9780367694272qBB bTaylor & FranciscGBP 230.00fBB a01 aeng7 aGTM2thema7 aNHK2thema7 aDS2thema7 a1KJ2bisac7 a1H2bisac7 aGTB2bic7 aHBJK2bic7 aDS2bic7 a1KJ2bisac7 a1H2bisac7 aHIS0410002bisac7 aPOL0570002bisac7 aLIT0041002bisac7 aSOC0080102bisac1 aPatricia Noxolo10aRoutledge Handbook of Caribbean Studies a1 aOxfordbRoutledgec20250402 a444 p bThe Routledge Handbook of Caribbean Studies provides a critical collection of world-class scholarship about this fascinating, diverse and dynamic region. Bringing together new and established voices on the Anglophone, Francophone, Spanish-speaking and Dutch-speaking Caribbean, the handbook explores the cultural and historical shapes and reach of the region, as well as the environmental, climatic and (geo)political challenges that it faces in the 21st century. Each of its four parts – Environment, (Geo)politics, History and Culture – explores the region’s conceptual and material entanglements and disentanglements, its transnational and transregional connections and disconnections, and its historical wakes and posts. The Routledge Handbook of Caribbean Studies is essential reading for all who want to know more about this much-studied but often misrepresented and misunderstood region.1 aKevon Rhiney4B011 aRonald Cummings4B01 c8766d8766