Skip to main content
Article
Impediments to recovery in New Orleans' Upper and Lower Ninth Ward: One Year After Hurricane Katrina
Disasters (2007)
  • Rebekah Green, Columbia University
  • Lisa K Bates, Portland State University
  • Andrew Smyth, Columbia University
Abstract

In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, a rapid succession of plans put forward a host of recovery options for the Upper and Lower Ninth Ward in New Orleans. Much of the debate focused on catastrophic damage to residential structures and discussions of the capacity of low-income residents to repair their neighbourhoods. This article examines impediments to the current recovery process of the Upper and Lower Ninth Ward, reporting results of an October 2006 survey of 3,211 plots for structural damage, flood damage and post-storm recovery. By examining recovery one year after Hurricane Katrina, and by doing so in the light of flood and structural damage, it is possible to identify impediments to recovery that may disproportionately affect these neighbourhoods. This paper concludes with a discussion of how pre- and post-disaster inequalities have slowed recovery in the Lower Ninth Ward and of the implications this has for post-disaster recovery planning there and elsewhere.

Publication Date
December, 2007
Citation Information
Rebekah Green, Lisa K Bates and Andrew Smyth. "Impediments to recovery in New Orleans' Upper and Lower Ninth Ward: One Year After Hurricane Katrina" Disasters Vol. 31 Iss. 4 (2007)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/lisa_bates/12/