Abstract
Hurricane Katrina and the disaster that unfolded in its wake provided a stark example of the pervasiveness and perniciousness of race and class inequalities in the United States. The media images constructed an unambiguous story: tens of thousands of mostly low-income African Americans were left to fend for themselves as the city of New Orleans flooded from breached levees on Lake Pontchartrain. Their only refuge was a large sports arena unequipped to serve as an “evacuee center” and devoid of any resources to support the thousands of people who gathered, many arriving only after wading through the toxic flood waters gathering in the city. In a city with a poverty rate of more than 30%, where one in three persons does not own a car, no significant effort was made by government at any level to assist the most vulnerable people to escape the disaster (Alterman, 2005). While Hurricane Katrina momentarily and unavoidably called attention to issues of race and class vulnerabilities, hazards and disaster research has clearly shown that social inequalities are core conditions that shape both disasters and environmental inequalities on a global scale. My goal in this chapter is to discuss what five decades of hazards and disaster research have revealed about race, class, and ethnic inequalities.
Access this chapter
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Purchases are for personal use only
Preview
Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Kreps, G. (1995). Disaster as systemic event and social catalyst: A clarification of the subject matter. International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters, 13(3), 255–284.
Barth, F. (Ed.). (1969). Ethnic groups and boundaries. Boston: Little, Brown.
Morrow, B.H., & Peacock, W.G. (1997). Disasters and social change: Hurricane Andrew and the reshaping of Miami? In W.G. Peacock, B.H. Morrow, & H. Gladwin (Eds.), Hurricane Andrew: Ethnicity, gender and the sociology of Disasters (pp. 226–242). New York: Routledge.
Watts, M.J. (1983). On the poverty of theory: Natural hazards research in context. In K. Hewitt, (Ed.), Interpretations of calamity from the perspective of human ecology. London: Allen and Unwin.
Mileti, D. (1999). Disasters by design: A reassessment of natural hazards in the United States. Washington, DC: Joseph Henry Press.
Peluso, N., & Watts, M. (2001). Violent environments. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
Bullard, R. (1994). Unequal protection: Environmental justice and communities of color, San Francisco: Sierra Club Books.
Yates, M. (2005). A statistical portrait of the working class. Monthly Review, 56(11), 12–31.
Drabek, T., & Boggs, K. (1968). Families in disaster: Reactions and relatives. Journal of Marriage and Family, 30, 443–451.
Bolin, R.C., & Bolton, P. (1986). Race, religion and ethnicity in disaster recovery. Monograph No. 42. Boulder, CO: University of Colorado.
Szasz, A., & Meuser, M. (2000). Unintended, inexorable: The production of environmental inequalities in Santa Clara County, California. American Behavioral Scientist, 43(4), 602–632.
Smith, M., & Feagin, J. (Eds), (1995). The bubbling cauldron: Race, ethnicity and the urban crisis. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Yelvington, K. (1997). Coping in a temporary way: The tent cities. In W. Peacock, B. Morrow, & H. Gladwin (Eds.), Hurricane Andrew: Ethnicity, gender, and the sociology of disaster (pp. 92–115). New York: Routledge.
Mitchell, J.K. (1990). Human dimensions of environmental hazards: Complexity, disparity, and the search for guidance. In A. Kirby (Ed.), Nothing to fear: Risk and hazards in American society (pp. 131–175). Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona Press.
Bolin, R.C., & Stanford, L. (1991). Shelter, housing and recovery: A comparison of U.S. disasters. Disasters, 15(1), 24–34.
Perry, R.W. (1987). Disaster preparedness and response among minority citizens. In R. Dynes, B. DeMarchi, & C. Pelanda (Eds.), Sociology of disasters. Milan: Agnelli.
Bullard, R., Johnson, G., & Torres, A. (2000). Environmental costs and consequences of sprawl. In R. Bullard, G. Johnson, & A. Torres (Eds.), Sprawl city: Race, politics and planning in Atlanta (pp. 21–38). Covelo, CA: Island Press.
Morrow, B.H. (1997). Stretching the bonds: The families of Hurricane Andrew. In W.G. Peacock, B.H. Morrow, & H. Gladwin (Eds.), Hurricane Andrew: Ethnicity, gender, and the sociology of disasters (pp. 141–170). New York: Routledge.
Omi, M., & Winant, H. (1994). Racial formation in the United States. New York: Routledge.
White, G.F., & Haas, J. (1975). Assessment of research on natural hazards. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Cutter, S., Richardson, D.B., & Wilbanks, T.J. (Eds.). (2003). The geographical dimensions of terrorism. New York: Routledge.
Grenier, G., & Morrow, B. (1997). Before the storm: The socio-political ecology of miami. In W. Peacock, B. Morrow, & H. Gladwin (Eds.), Hurricane Andrew: Ethnicity, gender, and the sociology of disaster (pp. 36–51). NY: Routledge.
Arvidson, E. (1999). Remapping Los Angeles, or taking the risk of class in postmodern urban theory. Economic Geography, 75(2), 134–156.
Hoffman, B. (1999). Terrorism trends and prospects. In I.O. Lesser, B. Hoffman, J. Arquilla, D. Ronfeldt, & M. Zanini (Eds.), Countering the new terrorism (pp. 7–38). With a Foreword by Brian Michael Jenkins. Santa Monica, CA: RAND.
McIntyre, M. (2002). The coproduction of race and class in Brazil and the United States. Antipode, 34(2), 168–175.
Szasz, A., & Meuser, M. (1997). Environmental inequalities: Literature review and proposals for new directions in research and theory. Current Sociology, 45(3), 99–120.
Klein, N. (2005). The rise of disaster capitalism. The Nation, 280(17), 9–11.
Bolton, P., Liebow, E., & Olson, J. (1993). Community conflict and uncertainty following a damaging earthquake: Low-income Latinos in Los Angeles, California, Environmental Professional, 15, 240–247.
Aptekar, L. (1994). Environmental disasters in global perspective. New York: GO Hall.
Soja, E. (2000). Postmetropolis: Critical studies of cities and regions. Malden, MA: Blackwell.
Soja, E. (1989). Postmodern geographies. London: Verso.
Glassman, J. (2003). Rethinking overdetermination, structural power and social change: A critique of Gibson-Graham, Resnick, and Wolff. Antipode, 35(4), 678–698.
King, L., & McCarthy, D. (2005). (Eds.), Environmental sociology: From analysis to action. New York: Rowman-Littlefield.
Boone, C., & Modarres, A. (1999). Creating a toxic neighborhood in Los Angeles county: A historical examination of environmental inequity. Urban Affairs Review, 35(2), 163–187.
Dynes, R.R., & Drabek, T.E. (1994). The structure of disaster research: Its policy and disciplinary implications. International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters, 12(1), 5–23.
Peet, R. (1998). Modern geographical thought. London: Blackwell.
Johnston, B. (1994). Who pays the price? The sociocultural context of the environmental crisis. Washington, DC: Island Press.
Phillips, B. (1993). Cultural diversity in disaster: Shelter, housing, and long-term recovery. International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters, 11(1), 99–110.
Blaikie, P., Cannon, T., Davis, I., & Davis, B. (1994). At risk: Natural hazards, people’s vulnerability, and disasters. New York: Routledge.
Hilhorst, D. (2003). Responding to disasters: Diversity of bureaucrats, technocrats and local people. International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters, 21(1), 37–55.
Cutter, S., Hodgson, M., & Dow, K. (2001). Subsidized inequities: The spatial patterning of environmental risks and federally assisted housing. Urban Geography, 22(1), 29–53.
Robbins, P. (2004). Political Ecology. Oxford, UK: Blackwell.
Downey, L. (1998). Environmental injustice: Is race or income a better predictor? Social Science Quarterly, 79(4), 766–778.
Oliver-Smith, A. (1994). Peru’s five hundred year earthquake: Vulnerability in historical context. In A. Varley (Ed.). Disasters, development and environment. London: Wiley.
Maskrey, A. (1994). Disaster mitigation as a crisis of paradigms: Reconstruction after the Alto Mayo earthquake, Peru. In A. Varley (Ed.), Disaster, development and environment. Chichester, UK: Wiley.
Burton, I., Kates R.W., & White, B.F. (1993). The environment as hazard (2nd ed.). New York: Guilford Press.
Tiefenbacher, J., & Hagelman, R. (1999). Environmental equity in urban Texas: Race, income, and patterns of acute and chronic toxic air releases in metropolitan counties. Urban Geography, 20, 516–533.
Perry, R.W., & Mushkatel, A. (1986). Minority citizens in disaster. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press.
Harvey, L. (1990). Critical social research. London: Unwin Hyman.
Barton, A.H. (1970). Communities in disaster. New York: Anchor.
Gibson-Graham, J.K., Resnick, S., & Wolff, R. (Eds.). (2001). Re/Presenting class: Essays in postmodern marxism. London: Duke University Press.
Bankoff, G., Frerks, G., & Hilhorst, T. (Eds.). (2003). Vulnerability: Disasters, development and people. London: Earthscan.
Dynes, R.R, Quarantelli, E.L., & Kreps, G.A. (1972). A perspective on disaster planning. Columbus, OH: Disaster Research Center, The Ohio State University.
Drabek, T.E. (1986). Human system responses to disaster: An inventory of sociological findings. New York: Springer-Verlag.
Haas, J.E., Kates, R., & Bowden, M. (1977). Reconstruction following disaster. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Watts, M.J. (1991). Heart of darkness: Reflections on famine and starvation in Africa. In R. Downs, D. Kerner, & S. Reyna (Eds.), Political economy of an African famine (pp. 23–70). Philadelphia: Gordon and Breach.
Bolin, R.C. (1994). Household and community recovery after earthquakes. Boulder, CO: Program on Environment Behavior, Institute of Behavioral Science, University of Colorado, Monograph No. 56.
Laird, R. (1991). Ethnography of a disaster. Unpublished MA Thesis. San Francisco: San Francisco State University.
Williams, H.B. (1989). A class act: Anthropology and the race to nation across ethnic terrain. Annual Review of Anthropology, 18, 401–444.
Bolin, R.C., Grineski, S., & Collins, T. (2005). The geography of despair: Environmental racism and the making of South Phoenix, Arizona, USA. Human Ecology Review, 12(2), 156–168.
Pellow, D., Weinberg, A., & Schnaiberg, A. (2005). The environmental justice movement: Equitable allocation of the costs and benefits of environmental management outcomes. In L. King & D. McCarthy (Eds.), Environmental sociology: From analysis to action (pp. 240–252). Lanham, MD: Rowman Littlefield.
Bolin, R.C., & Trainer, P. (1978). Modes of family recovery following disaster: A cross-national study. In E. Quarantelli (Ed.), Disasters: Theory and research (pp. 234–247). Beverly Hills, CA: SAGE.
Hoelscher, S. (2003). Making place, making race: Performances of whiteness in the Jim Crow south. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 93(3), 657–686.
Bolin, R.C., & Stanford, L. (1998b). The Northridge earthquake: Vulnerability and disaster. London: Routledge.
Eriksen, T. (1991). The cultural contexts of ethnic differences. In W.H. Form & S. Nosow (Eds.), Community in disaster (pp. 127–144). New York: Harper.
Pulido, L. (1996). A critical review of the methodology of environmental racism research. Antipode, 28(2), 142–159.
Hewitt, K. (1997). Regions of risk: A geographical introduction to disasters. Reading, MA: Addison Wesley Longman.
Pellow, D. (2000). Environmental inequality formation: Toward a theory of environmental injustice. American Behavioral Scientist, 43(4), 581–601.
Winant, H. (2001). The world is a ghetto: Race and democracy since World War II. New York: Basic Books.
Bolin, R.C., & Stanford, L. (1999). Constructing vulnerability in the first world: The Northridge earthquake in Southern California, 1994. In A. Oliver-Smith, & S. Hoffman (Eds.), The angry earth: Disasters in anthropological perspective (pp. 89–112). New York: Routledge.
Bolin, R.C. (1986). Disaster impact and recovery: A comparison of black and white victims. International Journal of Mass Emergenciesy and Disaster (IJMED), 4, 35–50.
Drabek, T.E. (1994). Disaster evacuation and the tourist industry. Boulder, CO: Institute of Behavioral Science, Program on Environment and Behavior, Natural Hazards Center.
Peacock, W.G., Morrow, B., & Gladwin, H. (2001). (Eds.), Hurricane Andrew and the reshaping of Miami. Miami, FL: International Hurricane Center.
Oliver-Smith, A. (1986). The martyred city: Death and rebirth in the Peruvian Andes. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
Wisner, B., & Walker, P. (2005). The world conference on disaster viewed through the lens of political ecology: A dozen big questions for Kobe and beyond. Capitalism, Nature, Socialism, 16(2), 89–95.
Peet, R., & Watts, M. (Eds.). (2004). Liberation ecologies: Environment, development, social movements (2nd ed.). London: Routledge.
Davis, M. (1992). City of quartz: Excavating the future in Los Angeles. London: Verso.
Morrow, B. (1999). Identifying and mapping community vulnerability. Disasters, 23(1), 1–18.
Hurley, A. (1995). Environmental inequalities: Class, race, and industrial pollution in Gary, Indiana, 1945–1980. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press.
Cannon, T. (1994). Vulnerability analysis and the explanation of ‘natural’ disasters. In A. Varley (Ed.), Disasters, development and environment. London: Wiley.
Kroll-Smith, S., & Couch, S. (1991). The real disaster is above ground: A mine fire and social conflict. Lexington: University of Kentucky Press.
Peacock, W.G. (1997). Cross-national and comparative disaster research. International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters, 15(1), 117–133.
Oliver-Smith, A. (1996). Anthropological research on hazards and disasters. Annual Review of Anthropology, 25, 303–328.
Quarantelli, E.L. (1994). Disaster studies: The consequences of the historical use of a sociological approach in the development of research. International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters, 12(1), 25–50.
Wisner, B., Blaikie, P., Cannon, T., & Davis, I. (2004). At risk: Natural hazards, people’s vulnerability, and disaster (2nd ed.). London: Routledge.
Davis, M. (2005). Planet of slums. London: Verso.
Bourdieu, P. (1984). Distinction: A social critique of the judgment of taste. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Dash, N., Peacock, W., & Morrow, B. (1997). And the poor get poorer: A neglected black community. In W. Peacock, B. Morrow, & H. Gladwin (Eds.), Hurricane Andrew: Ethnicity, gender, and the sociology of disaster (pp. 206–225). New York: Routledge.
Maskrey, A. (1993). Los Desastros No Son Naturales. Bogota: La Red/ITDG.
Pulido, L., Sidawi, S., & Vos, R. (1996). An archaeology of environmental racism in Los Angeles. Urban Geography, 17(5), 419–439.
Mustafa, D. (2005). The terrible geographicalness of terrorism: Reflections of a hazards geographer. Antipode, 37(1), 72–92.
Kasperson, R., Kasperson, J., & Dow, K. (2001). Vulnerability, equity, and global environmental change. In J. Kasperson & R. Kasperson (Eds.), Global environmental risk (pp. 247–272). New York: United Nations University Press.
Peacock, W.G., Morrow, B.H., & Gladwin, H. (Eds.). (1997). Hurricane Andrew: Ethnicity, gender and the sociology of disaster. London: Routledge.
Form, W.H., & Nosow, S. (1958). Community in disaster. New York: Harper & Brothers.
Mileti, D., Drabek, T., & Haas, J. (1975). Human systems in extreme environments, Monograph 21. Boulder, CO: University of Colorado Institute of Behavioral Science.
Alterman, E. (2005). Found in the flood. The Nation, 281(9), 33.
Bell, M. (2004). An invitation to environmental sociology (2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge.
Fothergill, A., Maestas, E.G.M., & Darlington, J. D. (1999). Race, ethnicity, and disasters in the United States: A review of the literature. Disasters, 23(2), 156–173.
Peacock, W.G., & Girard, C. (1997). Ethnic and racial inequalities in hurricane damage and insurance settlements. In W. Peacock, B. Morrow, & H. Gladwin (Eds.), Hurricane Andrew: Ethnicity, gender, and the sociology of disaster (pp. 171–190). New York: Routledge.
Bates, F., Fogleman, C., Parenton, V., Pittman, R., & Tracy, G. (1963). The social and psychological consequences of a natural disaster: A longitudinal study of Hurricane Audrey. NRC Disaster Study No. 18. Washington, DC: National Academy of Science.
Pulido, L. (2000). Rethinking environmental racism: White privilege and urban development in Southern California. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 90(1), 12–40.
Bullard, R. (1993). Confronting environmental racism: Voices from the crossroads. Boston: South End Press.
Turner, R., Nigg, J., & Paz, D. (1980). Community response to earthquake threat in Southern California. Los Angeles: University of California Los Angeles, Institute for Social Research.
Tierney, K. (1997). Business impacts of the Northridge earthquake. Journal of Contingencies and Crisis Management, 5, 87–97.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2007 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Bolin, B. (2007). Race, Class, Ethnicity, and Disaster Vulnerability. In: Handbook of Disaster Research. Handbooks of Sociology and Social Research. Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-32353-4_7
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-32353-4_7
Publisher Name: Springer, New York, NY
Print ISBN: 978-0-387-73952-6
Online ISBN: 978-0-387-32353-4
eBook Packages: Humanities, Social Sciences and LawSocial Sciences (R0)