This brief shows how the characteristics of rural Gulf Coast families place them at higher risks during natural disasters and make them far less able to recover from such calamities. Although few realize it, nonmetro residents represented the majority (55%) of the population affected by Hurricane Katrina in Mississippi. They also constituted 17% of the people living in Alabama's disaster-stricken area, and about 12% of the affected population in Louisiana. These are not inconsequential numbers; they represent thousands of inhabitants living in small communities dotting the tri-state region. This Rural Realities brief draws much needed attention to nonmetro areas affected by Hurricane Katrina and outlines the key features of the rural people...
Rural areas are uniquely vulnerable to a variety of hazards given their social and economic composit...
Flooding has become more common in the U.S. and poses health risks to individuals, families, and com...
Since Hurricane Katrina overtook New Orleans and caused hundreds of thousands of Gulf Coast resident...
Hurricane Katrina exposed the poverty that lay in our midst, and although the images served to remin...
The increasing magnitude of hurricane damage in the southern United States in recent years, capped o...
This paper provides a descriptive case study to develop a better understanding of the disaster recov...
This special issue of Southern Rural Sociology brings together a diverse array of theoretical and em...
Disasters highlight elements of community vulnerability and resiliency. Effective responses are orga...
In 2005, devastating hurricanes Katrina and Rita hit the Gulf Coast of the United States of America,...
Hurricane Katrina devastated the social, economic, and physical infrastructure of communities along ...
Following the 2005 environmental disaster event of Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans and the surroundin...
Hurricane Katrina tested the disaster resiliency of communities throughout the city of New Orleans. ...
Six months after Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast, a Columbia-led research team conducted a rand...
Six months after Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast, a Columbia-led research team conducted a rand...
Flooding is on the rise in the US and rural states are not immune. Chronic and one-time flood events...
Rural areas are uniquely vulnerable to a variety of hazards given their social and economic composit...
Flooding has become more common in the U.S. and poses health risks to individuals, families, and com...
Since Hurricane Katrina overtook New Orleans and caused hundreds of thousands of Gulf Coast resident...
Hurricane Katrina exposed the poverty that lay in our midst, and although the images served to remin...
The increasing magnitude of hurricane damage in the southern United States in recent years, capped o...
This paper provides a descriptive case study to develop a better understanding of the disaster recov...
This special issue of Southern Rural Sociology brings together a diverse array of theoretical and em...
Disasters highlight elements of community vulnerability and resiliency. Effective responses are orga...
In 2005, devastating hurricanes Katrina and Rita hit the Gulf Coast of the United States of America,...
Hurricane Katrina devastated the social, economic, and physical infrastructure of communities along ...
Following the 2005 environmental disaster event of Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans and the surroundin...
Hurricane Katrina tested the disaster resiliency of communities throughout the city of New Orleans. ...
Six months after Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast, a Columbia-led research team conducted a rand...
Six months after Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast, a Columbia-led research team conducted a rand...
Flooding is on the rise in the US and rural states are not immune. Chronic and one-time flood events...
Rural areas are uniquely vulnerable to a variety of hazards given their social and economic composit...
Flooding has become more common in the U.S. and poses health risks to individuals, families, and com...
Since Hurricane Katrina overtook New Orleans and caused hundreds of thousands of Gulf Coast resident...