In a region beset by serial disasters, resilient recovery from hazardous events is not just a worthy goal, it is also an imperative. The Caribbean Resilience and Recovery Knowledge Network (CRRKN) was set up in November 2019 with funding from the Global Challenges Research Fund in the United Kingdom to encourage knowledge exchange and learning between researchers, policymakers, and practitioners, to generate a research agenda, and to promote more equitable and sustainable recovery after disasters and a more resilient future for the Caribbean. The CRRKN brings together a team of world-class partners with extensive and complementary expertise in climate change science, disaster risk management, communications, and resilience and sustainability studies. The premise of the network is that transformational shifts can only be achieved if lessons from past events are institutionalised through joint analysis, reflection, and dialogue on recovery processes, producing a fundamental change in the way that recovery is understood and supported across the Caribbean. One approach used is that of 'forensic analysis' of past events, conducted by multiple stakeholders to co-create lessons stemming from recovery.One month after the CRRKN was established, a 'Forensic Workshop on Disaster Recovery' was convened to foreground the '11 th Caribbean Conference on Comprehensive Disaster Management' (held in Sint Maarten on 2-6 December 2019). This workshop was the first event of its kind in the Caribbean, bringing together governmental, civil society, and scientific stakeholders with different experiences, expertise, and views to retrace decisions and steps taken following two separate disasters: Hurricane Maria in Dominica in 2017; and the volcanic eruptions in Montserrat in 1995-97. The task was to identify and agree collectively on the most critical lessons learned from recovery processes on the two islands and pinpoint unresolved recovery issues, including those that could not have been planned for easily. For example, not knowing what resources will be available to respond to, and recover from, a disaster, before it happens, poses a major challenge to Caribbean states. Recovery processes were found to be complex and not well understood by the various groups, making it difficult to translate lessons into meaningful recommendations that can be codified for recovery planning elsewhere. Further joint analysis of disaster impacts, recovery, and policy effectiveness is certainly needed.This special issue of Disasters reflects on the increased virtual communication that is occurring within the Caribbean and across the Atlantic (spurred inadvertently by