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Origin of Caribbean

The word Caribbean is said to be derived from the

indigenous peoples name for themselves, Carib. The term West Indies which is often used interchangeably with Caribbean is the name given to the region by Christopher Columbus in 1492.
As with the inexact name of the region so to is there little

agreement on what area is included within the Caribbean. Different criteria are used to define the region.

THE GEOGRAPHICAL CARIBBEAN


This term describes the area washed by the Caribbean Sea and is often described as the Caribbean Basin. The Caribbean Sea has been defined as an area between 9 and 22 degrees North and 60 and 89 degrees West.

With these coordinates the Caribbean would be bounded to the south by the coast of Venezuela, Columbia and Panama, to the west by Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala Belize and Mexico, to the north by Cuba Jamaica and Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Puerto Rico and to the east by the Lesser Antilles chain of island. The common link is the Caribbean Sea.

THE HISTORICAL CARIBBEAN


This describes the area that experienced European colonization, slavery, indentureship and the plantation system. Since all Caribbean countries were affected by these institutions, it has become typical to identify a country with the specific European power that dominated it. The Caribbean now has, in addition to indigenous Amerindian cultural roots, strong cultural ties with Europe, Africa and Asia.

Geological Caribbean
It is the area that is defined by the

Caribbean Plate and which experiences similar tectonic, seismic, and volcanic features.

Political Caribbean
For political purposes the concept of CARICOM is used to

define the Caribbean. But this definition was limited to the eleven island states and territories and two mainland countries until Suriname and Haiti were added to the grouping in 1995 and 2000 respectively
A more recent definition is based on the Association of

Caribbean States (ACS) formed in 1994. This definition incorporates all the countries in Central America including Mexico and Panama, all the countries in South America and all the islands in and around the Caribbean Sea as well as Bahamas and Barbados.

Girvan (cited in Benn and Hall, 2000), posits four notions of the Caribbean:
The Caribbean as the island chain lying in the Caribbean

Sea.
The Caribbean as Basin comprising the countries in and

around the Caribbean Sea.


The Caribbean as an ethno-historic zone comprising the

islands and adjacent coastal communities in South and Central America which share a similar history, culture and ethnicity.
Most recent, the Caribbean as a transnational community

that embraces the Caribbean diaspora overseas.

Problems in Defining the Caribbean


Geographical: This definition includes countries not normally associated with the Caribbean Panama, Colombia and other countries of Central America.

On the other hand , Guyana, Barbados and the Bahamas do not have coastlines on the Caribbean Sea. Yet these countries are commonly accepted as part of the Caribbean.

Historical : This definition would include

Guyana and the Bahamas. It should also include the French, Dutch and Spanish speaking countries of the Caribbean and Central America.
The problem with defining the Caribbean

according to linguistic or European heritage is the tendency to ignore the similar experiences of each island by the colonial power.

Geological: The northern edge of the

Caribbean Plate defines much of Belize, Cuba, the Bahamas and Guyana as extraregional.
However, the western edge of the Caribbean

Plate is located in the Pacific and includes Honduras, Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Panama in the Caribbean.

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