
eBook - ePub
After the Storm
Militarization, Occupation, and Segregation in Post-Katrina America
- 184 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
After the Storm
Militarization, Occupation, and Segregation in Post-Katrina America
About this book
This book examines the state of race relations in America 10 years after one of the worst natural disasters in American history, Hurricane Katrina, and looks at the socioeconomic consequences of decades of public and private practices brought to light by the storm in cities throughout the Gulf Coast as well as in America more broadly.
More than a decade ago, Hurricane Katrina served to expose a well-engineered system of oppression, one which continues to privilege some groups and disadvantage others. In the wake of the natural disaster that hit New Orleans, it became clear that institutions such as residential segregation, mass incarceration and unemployment, police brutality, political disenfranchisement, racial profiling, gentrification, community occupation, discrimination, and a prison-to-school pipeline are expressly intended to work against people of color and individuals from economically disadvantaged backgrounds. Unfortunately, very little has improved in the lives of people living in majority-minority communities since Katrina.
After the Storm uses Hurricane Katrina and the aftermath of the natural disaster as a point of departure for understanding enduring racial divides in asset ownership, academic achievement, educational attainment, and mass incarceration in New Orleans and beyond. The book explores the many specific aspects of the widespread problem and considers how to move toward achieving a state where all can thrive. Readers will better appreciate the key roles of race, inequality, education, occupation, and militarization in understanding the failures in the responses to this disaster and grasp how institutionalized inequity continues to plague our nation.
More than a decade ago, Hurricane Katrina served to expose a well-engineered system of oppression, one which continues to privilege some groups and disadvantage others. In the wake of the natural disaster that hit New Orleans, it became clear that institutions such as residential segregation, mass incarceration and unemployment, police brutality, political disenfranchisement, racial profiling, gentrification, community occupation, discrimination, and a prison-to-school pipeline are expressly intended to work against people of color and individuals from economically disadvantaged backgrounds. Unfortunately, very little has improved in the lives of people living in majority-minority communities since Katrina.
After the Storm uses Hurricane Katrina and the aftermath of the natural disaster as a point of departure for understanding enduring racial divides in asset ownership, academic achievement, educational attainment, and mass incarceration in New Orleans and beyond. The book explores the many specific aspects of the widespread problem and considers how to move toward achieving a state where all can thrive. Readers will better appreciate the key roles of race, inequality, education, occupation, and militarization in understanding the failures in the responses to this disaster and grasp how institutionalized inequity continues to plague our nation.
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Yes, you can access After the Storm by Lori Latrice Martin, Hayward Derrick Horton, Kenneth J. Fasching-Varner Ph.D., Lori Latrice Martin,Hayward Derrick Horton,Kenneth J. Fasching-Varner Ph.D. in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & Social Policy. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter One: A Tale of Two Cities: Race and Wealth Inequality in the New South
- Chapter Two: Accelerated Categorical Inequality: New Orleans in the Eye of the Storm
- Chapter Three: Loaded-God Complex: Engaging Educational and Penal Realism in Post-Katrina Times
- Chapter Four: What Do You Know about My Black Son? A Counternarrative That Challenges the Deficit Perspective
- Chapter Five: Three Louisiana Floods: Cases of Genocide?
- Chapter Six: Can You Hear Me Now? Race, Call-ins, and the Myth of Public Accountability
- Chapter Seven: The Effects of Hurricane Katrina on Black Women: Understanding Women’s Fear through an Intersectional Lens
- Chapter Eight: Hand Over Minority Economies (H.O.M.E.): Examining the Persistent Waves of Divesting, Dismantling, and Devaluing of Black Bodies in America
- Chapter Nine: Giving Students Voice: Book Dealing and Discussions That Build a Broken Community
- Chapter Ten: Triple Threat: Militarization, Occupation, and Segregation in Post-Katrina America
- Bibliography
- Index
- About the Editors and Contributors