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There is no such thing as a natural disaster : race, class, and Hurricane Katrina / edited by Chester Hartman and Gregory D. Squires.

Material type: Computer fileComputer filePublication details: New York : Routledge, 2006.Description: ix, 311 p. : ill. ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 041595486X (hb)
  • 0415954878 (pb)
DDC classification:
  • 976.044 22
LOC classification:
  • HV636 2005.L8 T44 2006
Online resources:
Partial contents:
Foreword / Mary Frances Berry<BR> 1. Pre-Katrina, Post-Katrina / Chester Hartman & Gregory D. Squires<BR> 2. Urban disasters and response : the historical context / Michael Powers<BR> 3. Katrina from the bottom up : oral history, folklore, and community /$Alan H. Stein and Gene B. Preuss<BR> 4. Towards a transformative view of race : the crisis and opportunity of Katrina / John A. Powell, Hasan Kwame Jeffries, Daniel W. Newhart, and Eric Stiens Kirwan Inst<BR> 5. Abandoned before the storms : the glaring disaster of race, class, and gender disparities in the Gulf / Heidi Hartmann and Avis Jones-DeWeever<BR> 6. Forgetting age, misrepresenting the elderly: the real scandals of Katrina and the politics of aging in the United States / Margaret Gullette<BR> 7. Housing destruction / Sheila Crowley<BR> 8. Reclaiming New Orleans working-class communities: the importance of healthy housing for reoccupancy and rebuilding / Robert O. Zdenek, Brian Gumm, Jane Malone, and Ralph Scott<BR> 9. Public health and the public health system, pre- and post-Katrina / Evangeline (Vangy) Franklin<BR> 10. Double jeopardy : public education in New Orleans before and after the storm / Michael Casserly<BR> 11. An old economy for the "New" New Orleans? Post-Hurricane Katrina economic development efforts / Robert Whelan<BR> 12. Government is not enough: the role of financial institutions / John Taylor and Josh Silver<BR> 13. The role of local organizing : house- to-house with boots on the ground! / Wade Rathke and Beulah Labostrie<BR> 14. Rebuilding a tortured past or creating a model future : the limits and potentials of planning / Peter Marcuse.
Review: "There is No Such Thing as a Natural Disaster is the first critical scholarly book on the catastrophic impact of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans. The disaster will go down in record as one of the worst in American history, not least because of the government's generally inept and cavalier response. But it's also a huge story for other obvious reasons. Firstly, the impact of the hurricane was uneven, and race and class (and tied to this, poverty) were deeply implicated in the unevenness. It was not by accident that the poorest and blackest neighborhoods were the ones that were buried under water. Secondly, the response underscored the impoverishment of social policy (or what passes for it) in both George W. Bush's America and more specifically the Republican-dominated South. Thirdly, New Orleans is not just any place - it's a great American city with a rich and unique history. People care about the place and what happens there. Fourthly, what happened and what will happen there can tell us a great deal about the state of urban and regional planning in contemporary America. The book, edited by two eminent scholars/authors, gathers together ten excellent scholars to put forth a multifaceted portrait of the social implications of the disaster. And the disaster was primarily social in nature, as the title reminds us. The book covers the response to the disaster and the roles that race and class played, its impact on housing, the historical context of urban disasters in America, the nature of contemporary metropolitan planning, what the hurricane has taught us about planning, the role of the vast prison system in all of this, the future of economic development, the roles of business and the media, and how the hurricane disproportionately impacted female headed households. In total, it offers a critical and comprehensive social portrait of the disaster's catastrophic effects on New Orleans." -- BOOK JACKET.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Australian Emergency Management Library BOOK 976.044 THE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 900172983

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Foreword / Mary Frances Berry<BR> 1. Pre-Katrina, Post-Katrina / Chester Hartman & Gregory D. Squires<BR> 2. Urban disasters and response : the historical context / Michael Powers<BR> 3. Katrina from the bottom up : oral history, folklore, and community /$Alan H. Stein and Gene B. Preuss<BR> 4. Towards a transformative view of race : the crisis and opportunity of Katrina / John A. Powell, Hasan Kwame Jeffries, Daniel W. Newhart, and Eric Stiens Kirwan Inst<BR> 5. Abandoned before the storms : the glaring disaster of race, class, and gender disparities in the Gulf / Heidi Hartmann and Avis Jones-DeWeever<BR> 6. Forgetting age, misrepresenting the elderly: the real scandals of Katrina and the politics of aging in the United States / Margaret Gullette<BR> 7. Housing destruction / Sheila Crowley<BR> 8. Reclaiming New Orleans working-class communities: the importance of healthy housing for reoccupancy and rebuilding / Robert O. Zdenek, Brian Gumm, Jane Malone, and Ralph Scott<BR> 9. Public health and the public health system, pre- and post-Katrina / Evangeline (Vangy) Franklin<BR> 10. Double jeopardy : public education in New Orleans before and after the storm / Michael Casserly<BR> 11. An old economy for the "New" New Orleans? Post-Hurricane Katrina economic development efforts / Robert Whelan<BR> 12. Government is not enough: the role of financial institutions / John Taylor and Josh Silver<BR> 13. The role of local organizing : house- to-house with boots on the ground! / Wade Rathke and Beulah Labostrie<BR> 14. Rebuilding a tortured past or creating a model future : the limits and potentials of planning / Peter Marcuse.

"There is No Such Thing as a Natural Disaster is the first critical scholarly book on the catastrophic impact of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans. The disaster will go down in record as one of the worst in American history, not least because of the government's generally inept and cavalier response. But it's also a huge story for other obvious reasons. Firstly, the impact of the hurricane was uneven, and race and class (and tied to this, poverty) were deeply implicated in the unevenness. It was not by accident that the poorest and blackest neighborhoods were the ones that were buried under water. Secondly, the response underscored the impoverishment of social policy (or what passes for it) in both George W. Bush's America and more specifically the Republican-dominated South. Thirdly, New Orleans is not just any place - it's a great American city with a rich and unique history. People care about the place and what happens there. Fourthly, what happened and what will happen there can tell us a great deal about the state of urban and regional planning in contemporary America. The book, edited by two eminent scholars/authors, gathers together ten excellent scholars to put forth a multifaceted portrait of the social implications of the disaster. And the disaster was primarily social in nature, as the title reminds us. The book covers the response to the disaster and the roles that race and class played, its impact on housing, the historical context of urban disasters in America, the nature of contemporary metropolitan planning, what the hurricane has taught us about planning, the role of the vast prison system in all of this, the future of economic development, the roles of business and the media, and how the hurricane disproportionately impacted female headed households. In total, it offers a critical and comprehensive social portrait of the disaster's catastrophic effects on New Orleans." -- BOOK JACKET.

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