Asymmetrical Recovery in Cities After Disaster. The Lower Ninth Ward in New Orleans After Hurricane Katrina

被引:3
|
作者
Kammerbauer, Mark [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Tech Hsch Nurnberg, Kesslerplatz 12, D-90489 Nurnberg, Germany
[2] Univ Queensland, St Lucia, Qld 4072, Australia
关键词
Disaster recovery; Floods; Disaster; Vulnerability; Urban planning;
D O I
10.1007/s13147-014-0309-4
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
When flood events trigger disaster in cities, the recovery process constitutes a complex field of activity covering urban space, state institutions, and impacted citizens. Recovery may not occur evenly, but instead, asymmetrically. In the case of the city of New Orleans in the USA, heavily hit by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, this can be observed particularly in the city's Lower Ninth Ward. Here, a rebuilding program oriented towards homeowners was supposed to enable citizens to return. Why couldn't the plans and programs for recovery prevent the emergence of asymmetric recovery in the Lower Ninth Ward? This paper shows that these plans and programs didn't adequately respond to urban spatial and social conditions and weren't oriented towards the vulnerability of impacted citizens. For this purpose, empirical data collected via quantitative and qualitative methods in 2007 and 2009 are featured here. The aim is to support knowledge-based planning recommendations that address the vulnerability of impacted citizens and to contribute to a discussion on just and sustainable recovery in and of cities after disaster.
引用
收藏
页码:427 / 439
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Impediments to recovery in New Orleans' upper and lower ninth ward: One year after Hurricane Katrina
    Green, Rebekah
    Bates, Lisa K.
    Smyth, Andrew
    [J]. DISASTERS, 2007, 31 (04) : 311 - 335
  • [2] "THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE NEW ORLEANS": SENSE OF PLACE AND COMMUNITY RECOVERY IN THE NINTH WARD AFTER HURRICANE KATRINA
    Chamlee-wright, Emily
    Storr, Virgil Henry
    [J]. JOURNAL OF URBAN AFFAIRS, 2009, 31 (05) : 615 - 634
  • [3] New Orleans and Hurricane Katrina. II: The central region and the Lower Ninth Ward
    Seed, R. B.
    Bea, R. G.
    Athanasopoulos-Zekkos, A.
    Boutwell, G. P.
    Bray, J. D.
    Cheung, C.
    Cobos-Roa, D.
    Ehrensing, L.
    Harder, L. F., Jr.
    Pestana, J. M.
    Riemer, M. F.
    Rogers, J. D.
    Storesund, R.
    Vera-Grunauer, X.
    Wartman, J.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOTECHNICAL AND GEOENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING, 2008, 134 (05) : 718 - 739
  • [5] Hurricane Betsy and the Politics of Disaster in New Orleans's Lower Ninth Ward, 1965-1967
    Horowitz, Andy
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY, 2014, 80 (04) : 893 - 934
  • [6] Returning to New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Paxson, Christina
    Rouse, Cecilia Elena
    [J]. AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2008, 98 (02): : 38 - 42
  • [7] The Long-Term Recovery of New Orleans' Population After Hurricane Katrina
    Fussell, Elizabeth
    [J]. AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST, 2015, 59 (10) : 1231 - 1245
  • [8] Equity Planning in Post-Hurricane Katrina New Orleans: Lessons From the Ninth Ward
    Reardon, Kenneth M.
    Ionescu-Heroiu, Marcel
    Rumbach, Andrew J.
    [J]. CITYSCAPE, 2008, 10 (03) : 57 - 76
  • [9] Rebuilding housing in New Orleans: the Road Home Program after the Hurricane Katrina disaster
    Green, Timothy F.
    Olshansky, Robert B.
    [J]. HOUSING POLICY DEBATE, 2012, 22 (01) : 75 - 99
  • [10] Beyond Disaster Exceptionalism: Social Movement Developments in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina
    Luft, Rachel E.
    [J]. AMERICAN QUARTERLY, 2009, 61 (03) : 499 - 527