Flooding has become more common in the U.S. and poses health risks to individuals, families, and communities. However, not all places face the same risk of flooding. This brief describes how flood risk varies across places with different demographic and social characteristics. It shows that rural Census tracts and tracts with larger shares of socioeconomically vulnerable populations have larger relative shares of properties at risk of flooding
Abstract Infrastructure equity is an immediate concern with levees, constituting the backbone of the...
peer reviewedStudies on inequalities in exposure to flood risk have explored whether population of a...
This research explores the challenges of reducing arid land flood risk among a diverse and growing c...
Flooding is on the rise in the US and rural states are not immune. Chronic and one-time flood events...
Flooding is a deadly and expensive natural disaster. In the United States, the Federal Emergency Ma...
Current research on flooding risk often focuses on understanding hazards, de-emphasizing the complex...
Current research on flooding risk often focuses on understanding hazards, de-emphasizing the complex...
Studies on the impacts of hurricanes, tropical storms, and tornados indicate that poor communities o...
Flooding remains a major problem for the United States, causing numerous deaths and damaging countle...
Decades of environmental racism have disproportionately placed vulnerable communities in low-lying, ...
Flooding remains a major problem for the United States, causing numerous deaths and damaging countle...
Flooding risk results from complex interactions between hydrological hazards (e.g., riverine inundat...
This paper examines the extent to which flood-risk revisions, on their own, can affect the size of t...
Communities are socio-environmental systems that can be vulnerable to and adversely impacted by natu...
The United States government sponsored the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (HOLC) in the 1930s to asse...
Abstract Infrastructure equity is an immediate concern with levees, constituting the backbone of the...
peer reviewedStudies on inequalities in exposure to flood risk have explored whether population of a...
This research explores the challenges of reducing arid land flood risk among a diverse and growing c...
Flooding is on the rise in the US and rural states are not immune. Chronic and one-time flood events...
Flooding is a deadly and expensive natural disaster. In the United States, the Federal Emergency Ma...
Current research on flooding risk often focuses on understanding hazards, de-emphasizing the complex...
Current research on flooding risk often focuses on understanding hazards, de-emphasizing the complex...
Studies on the impacts of hurricanes, tropical storms, and tornados indicate that poor communities o...
Flooding remains a major problem for the United States, causing numerous deaths and damaging countle...
Decades of environmental racism have disproportionately placed vulnerable communities in low-lying, ...
Flooding remains a major problem for the United States, causing numerous deaths and damaging countle...
Flooding risk results from complex interactions between hydrological hazards (e.g., riverine inundat...
This paper examines the extent to which flood-risk revisions, on their own, can affect the size of t...
Communities are socio-environmental systems that can be vulnerable to and adversely impacted by natu...
The United States government sponsored the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (HOLC) in the 1930s to asse...
Abstract Infrastructure equity is an immediate concern with levees, constituting the backbone of the...
peer reviewedStudies on inequalities in exposure to flood risk have explored whether population of a...
This research explores the challenges of reducing arid land flood risk among a diverse and growing c...