The answer, as many things in life: it depends.
If the information presented isn't enough to do a sensible review, your duty as reviewer is to look for the information, or to allow others reviewers to do so if you feel inclined to not use your time.
Now on your specific assertions:
When one reviews answers to old questions, one can only see the question and the answer, so it can't be determined on that screen if the question has already been answered
That's not all the information presented. At the right you also see how many answers are present, if it's accepted, when it was last active, etc. You are also presented comments under the post, dates of edits (if it was edited). In other words, most of the information you will have about the answer in the context of the question.
Partial answers are supposed to be welcome and encouraged where helpful
Note here that there's a big caveat. Partial answers to too broad questions tend to be frowned upon, since when someone tries to narrow the focus it usually has to take into account all the answers. As such, several partial answers may be a indicative of a problem with the question. We also favor complete answers over partial ones, so it's understandable that partial answers could be lighting rods of downvotes.
should one be expected to always open up another tab/window to check if the answer is redundant?
Well, the JIT guidance for the late answer queue says:
This is a new user's answer to an old question. Watch for hidden gems, non-answers, and spam.
And in the non-answers classification we include:
Answers that do not fundamentally answer the question may be removed. This includes answers that are: [...] exact duplicates of other answers
That doesn't mean that you should open every answer, but there are taletales that makes one suspicious that something fishy is going on, like logical leaping, relevant answers with irrelevant links, etc.