“…In addressing this lacuna, this paper illustrates the contribution that documenting SIDS environmental knowledge practices can make in advancing disaster risk reduction, human security governance and climate justice, by exemplifying what we can productively learn from the territory of the Caribbean. In the same vein, our discussion of empirical evidence of replicable and scalable partnerships in community-based securitization for creating resilience to climate change in the Caribbean is aligned with a growing body of literature highlighting the importance of "hearing local voices" from SIDS (Kelman, 2010, p. 605), and expanding understanding of human security to encompass climate justice and human rights of access to health, livelihoods and education, as well as participation in governance (Robinson and Shine, 2017;Scobie, 2019;Young, 2019). In the following sections, we look at Cuba and the…”