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Caribbean in/security and creativity: A working paper

Noxolo, Patricia (2016) Caribbean in/security and creativity: A working paper. Working Paper. University of Birmingham. (Unpublished)

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Abstract

This working paper exists as part of a Leverhulme funded network that attempts to re-theorise the everyday negotiation between security and insecurity (in/security) in the Caribbean, connecting it with the forms of everyday creativity that are so much a feature of Caribbean life. The project conceives of in/security in a broad interdisciplinary sense, including everyday experiences of violence, conflict and criminality at a range of scales (in the home, neighbourhood, nation and region), but also including environmental, livelihood and, most broadly, human security.

Type of Work:Monograph (Working Paper)
School/Faculty:Colleges (2008 onwards) > College of Life & Environmental Sciences
Department:School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences
References:

Noxolo, P. and Featherstone, D. (2014) “Commentary: Coproducing Caribbean Geographies of In/security,” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 39(4), 603–7.

*Note that this is a short working paper – references have therefore been kept to a minimum, but will appear in full in published academic versions. A list of relevant reading appears on the CARISCC blog site: https://cariscc.wordpress.com/relevant-reading/

Date:14 September 2016
Projects:CARISCC
Series/Collection Name:Caribbean In/Securities: Creativity and Negotiation in the Caribbean (CARISCC) Working Papers Series
Keywords:Caribbean Studies, Caribbean in/securities, Caribbean Creativity
Subjects:G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation > G Geography (General)
Related URLs:
URLURL Type
http://www.birmingham.ac.uk/research/activity/cariscc/index.aspxOrganisation
https://cariscc.wordpress.com/UNSPECIFIED
Funders:The Leverhulme Trust
Copyright Status:This working paper is copyright of the University and the author. In addition, parts of the paper may feature content whose copyright is owned by a third party, but which has been used either by permission or under the Fair Dealing provisions. The intellectual property rights in respect of this work are as defined by the terms of any licence that is attached to the paper. Where no licence is associated with the work, any subsequent use is subject to the terms of The Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988 (or as modified by any successor legislation). Any reproduction of the whole or part of this paper must be in accordance with the licence or the Act (whichever is applicable) and must be properly acknowledged. For non-commercial research and for private study purposes, copies of the paper may be made/distributed and quotations used with due attribution. Commercial distribution or reproduction in any format is prohibited without the permission of the copyright holders.
Copyright Holders:Dr Patricia Noxolo, University of Birmingham
ID Code:2208

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