Hurricane Katrina pounded the Gulf South at the end of August 2005, devastating lives and rais-ing questions about how race and class inXuence human, as well as institutional, responses to disas-ter. This study uses survey data collected from over 1200 Hurricane Katrina survivors to examine these inXuences on a wide array of responses, ranging from evacuation timing and emotional support to housing and employment situations and plans to return to pre-storm communities. Results reveal strong racial and class diVerences, indicating that neither of these dimensions can be reduced to the other when seeking to understand responses by survivors themselves. This intersection renders low-income black home owners from New Orleans those most in need ...
Hurricane Katrina, the costliest hurricane in U.S. history, hit the New Orleans metropolitan area in...
Hurricane Katrina caused a devastating amount of damage to the Gulf Coast region, but the psychologi...
This paper examines the decision of Hurricane Katrina evacuees to return to their pre-Katrina areas ...
The authors gratefully acknowledge the contributions of many colleagues in designing, implementing, ...
Americans like to believe that “we are all in the same boat ” when disaster strikes. Using a Du Bois...
To date, much of the scholarship on Hurricane Katrina has focused on failures of emergency disaster ...
Hurricane Katrina was a natural disaster that destroyed New Orleans, a major U.S. city, and it is re...
This study focuses on mental health and psychosocial distress sequelae of Hurricane Katrina cataclys...
This study examines the processes through which race, class, and gender power relationships were rep...
Hurricane Katrina has profoundly altered the lives of New Orleans residents as they continue for yea...
The devastation of Hurricane Katrina unveiled the legacy of racial and class stratification in New O...
This article introduces us to the complexities of conducting social scientific research in a major u...
textIn this dissertation project, I examine the experiences of displaced Hurricane Katrina survivors...
Given the importance of encouraging residents of a disaster-stricken community to remain there durin...
Hurricane Katrina was one of the most devastating natural disasters in the U.S. history. The economi...
Hurricane Katrina, the costliest hurricane in U.S. history, hit the New Orleans metropolitan area in...
Hurricane Katrina caused a devastating amount of damage to the Gulf Coast region, but the psychologi...
This paper examines the decision of Hurricane Katrina evacuees to return to their pre-Katrina areas ...
The authors gratefully acknowledge the contributions of many colleagues in designing, implementing, ...
Americans like to believe that “we are all in the same boat ” when disaster strikes. Using a Du Bois...
To date, much of the scholarship on Hurricane Katrina has focused on failures of emergency disaster ...
Hurricane Katrina was a natural disaster that destroyed New Orleans, a major U.S. city, and it is re...
This study focuses on mental health and psychosocial distress sequelae of Hurricane Katrina cataclys...
This study examines the processes through which race, class, and gender power relationships were rep...
Hurricane Katrina has profoundly altered the lives of New Orleans residents as they continue for yea...
The devastation of Hurricane Katrina unveiled the legacy of racial and class stratification in New O...
This article introduces us to the complexities of conducting social scientific research in a major u...
textIn this dissertation project, I examine the experiences of displaced Hurricane Katrina survivors...
Given the importance of encouraging residents of a disaster-stricken community to remain there durin...
Hurricane Katrina was one of the most devastating natural disasters in the U.S. history. The economi...
Hurricane Katrina, the costliest hurricane in U.S. history, hit the New Orleans metropolitan area in...
Hurricane Katrina caused a devastating amount of damage to the Gulf Coast region, but the psychologi...
This paper examines the decision of Hurricane Katrina evacuees to return to their pre-Katrina areas ...