People adjust to the risks presented by natural disasters in a number of ways; they can move out of harms way, they can self protect, or they can insure. This paper uses Hurricane Andrew, the largest U.S. natural disaster prior to Katrina, to evaluate how people and housing markets respond to a large disaster. Our analysis combines a unique ex post database on the storm’s damage along with information from the 1990 and 2000 Censuses in Dade County, Florida where the storm hit. The results suggest that the economic capacity of households to adjust explains most of the differences in demographic groups’ patterns of adjustment to the hurricane damage. Low income households respond primarily by moving into low-rent housing in areas that experie...
This paper combines the study of income distribution with that of natural disasters. We introduce se...
This paper combines the study of income distribution with that of natural disasters. We introduce se...
A natural disaster can greatly reduce human capital accumulation by households, and decrease the pos...
People can answer the risks presented by natural disasters in a number of ways; they can move out of...
Exposure to natural hazards is rapidly increasing due to growing populations within floodplains and ...
This paper explores elements of vulnerability to natural disasters in the context of Hurricane Katri...
According to Munich Re (2013), economic losses related to natural disasters have increased from an a...
Katrina demonstrated the growing vulnerability of the United States to major hurricanes. This paper ...
This article examines the impact of catastrophic hurricane events on income distribution in hurrica...
We can predict social and physical vulnerability with relatively accurate modeling. There are, howev...
We can predict social and physical vulnerability with relatively accurate modeling. There are, howev...
This paper examines the effects that Hurricane Katrina has on individuals in terms of where they loc...
Efforts to measure people’s responses to spatially delineated risks confront the potential for corre...
The insistent threat of natural disasters has invoked a plethora of literature on the vulnerability ...
●Natural Disasters are one of the most threatening to the people live in the US, the natural disaste...
This paper combines the study of income distribution with that of natural disasters. We introduce se...
This paper combines the study of income distribution with that of natural disasters. We introduce se...
A natural disaster can greatly reduce human capital accumulation by households, and decrease the pos...
People can answer the risks presented by natural disasters in a number of ways; they can move out of...
Exposure to natural hazards is rapidly increasing due to growing populations within floodplains and ...
This paper explores elements of vulnerability to natural disasters in the context of Hurricane Katri...
According to Munich Re (2013), economic losses related to natural disasters have increased from an a...
Katrina demonstrated the growing vulnerability of the United States to major hurricanes. This paper ...
This article examines the impact of catastrophic hurricane events on income distribution in hurrica...
We can predict social and physical vulnerability with relatively accurate modeling. There are, howev...
We can predict social and physical vulnerability with relatively accurate modeling. There are, howev...
This paper examines the effects that Hurricane Katrina has on individuals in terms of where they loc...
Efforts to measure people’s responses to spatially delineated risks confront the potential for corre...
The insistent threat of natural disasters has invoked a plethora of literature on the vulnerability ...
●Natural Disasters are one of the most threatening to the people live in the US, the natural disaste...
This paper combines the study of income distribution with that of natural disasters. We introduce se...
This paper combines the study of income distribution with that of natural disasters. We introduce se...
A natural disaster can greatly reduce human capital accumulation by households, and decrease the pos...