Latin America and The Caribbean: Lands and Peoples | 
| Author: David L. Clawson Publisher: McGraw-Hill Science/Engineering/Math Category: Book
List Price: $79.06 Buy New: $34.50 You Save: $44.56 (56%)
New (1) Used (4) from $33.33
Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 307916
Media: Paperback Edition: 3 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 432 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9 Dimensions (in): 10.6 x 8.2 x 0.9
ISBN: 0072521449 Dewey Decimal Number: 980 EAN: 9780072521443 ASIN: 0072521449
Publication Date: March 20, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: ------SAME DAY MAILING-----
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description This book has been written primarily as a geography of Latin America and the Caribbean, but is also intended to serve as an interdisciplinary introduction to the region. The focus of the text is on comprehension of concepts, patterns, and issues rather than on memorization of facts and figures. The latter are provided, but they are intended primarily to illustrate the underlying conditions rather than to serve as the focus of the text. The text is designed for maximum flexibility. Written to be readable for beginning students, it is also generously documented with scholarly references for the research needs of advanced undergraduate and graduate students. The individual chapters can be used in all, or in part, and in any order.
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| Customer Reviews:
Comprehensive, but spotty in places January 22, 2001 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
Clawson's text on Latin America and the Caribbean is one of the few texts that attempts comprehensive coverage of these regions with a thematic, rather than regional, approach.
It is a fair, balanced, and well-written treatise on the cultural and physical landscapes of the large region to our south. And yet, in many ways, it is a frustrating text. There is a lack of basic data from this text that confounds students. For example, there is no mention of basic facts, such as the largest economy in Latin America. No table provides GDP (gross domestic product), GNP (gross national product) or similar figures, although GDP/per capita is provided.
There are helpful illustrations, tables, and photographs and all are of generally high quality with one exception: the first section's reprints from Goode's Atlas, where fuzzy resolution blurs student use of the maps.
This is a good general text for geography, history, economics, and anthropology classes but the cost makes it very difficult to combine this text with more regional emphasis. At $65.00, this is no cheap paperback, and the high price is even more glaring when one considers the small size of the volume.
3rd edition addendum: Clawson's text has been improved with better use of graphics, updated stats, and some color. Still my choice of texts for Latin Americanist geography courses (at least survey ones). Updated 12.21.04
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