Hurricane Katrina Essay

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    the minorities that are singled out for the problems or benefit of the majority. In the article,” Who Dat?: Race and Its Conspicuous Consumption in Post-Katrina New Orleans,” Marc Perry states how African American citizens were affected by the devastating hurricane Katrina in 2005 and how the citizens reacted before and after hurricane Katrina to the relocation of African Americans to other places for the “restructuring” of New Orleans (Perry). In a related article titled,” Putting the Ninth Ward

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    Katrina Case Study

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    Running head: CASE STUDY ON HURRICANE KATRINA 1 Case Study 4: Response to Hurricane Katrina Jaret Reyes University of Nevada – Las Vegas CASE STUDY ON HURRICANE KATRINA 2 The events leading up to, during, and following Hurricane Katrina in 2005 found the local, state, and federal levels of government clashing, leading to a chaotic and ineffective governmental response. During this time, the Department of Homeland Security contained FEMA, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, only a few years

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    Hurricane Katrina struck the United States on August 29, 2005; it was the costliest and deadliest hurricane to ever hit the nation. It was one of the strongest to hit the coast in the last 100 years. Katrina caused as widespread of devastation along the Gulf Coast states and cities such as Mobile, AL, Gulfport, MS and the worst being New Orleans, LA. Although many people were prepared for the hurricane, no one would imagine the damage it would cause and the many lives it would take. Katrina started

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    the hurricane was overtly connected to the amount of television coverage they watched of the damage which included the looting of New Orleans, rescue efforts, and evacuations in and around the Superdome and the Convention Center in New Orleans. People fared better in terms of PTSD symptoms if they watched less television coverage overall, especially of the looting. They also benefitted from using prayer as a way of coping with the stress of the hurricane. A natural disaster, such as Hurricane Katrina

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    PUA 440 Case Study 3

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    foreseeing management than that of pre-Katrina (Stephens et al., 2007 p. 250). Another alternative to being more prepared both structurally and proactively would be the reconstruction of cities under major threat to the attack of natural disasters. Just as Californian government takes into account structures or areas of land that would be more or less compatible with society if a natural disaster such as an earthquake were to occur; the same could be said for hurricane-warning states. Instead of the Superdome

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    what happened. San Diego’s fire is no better than Hurricane Katrina: They will arrive over burning San Diego. The fires there will be put out so well. The people there will wait in a civilized manner. And they will receive foie gras and free massage for all their trouble, while their houses don’t flood, but instead burn calmly to the ground. (Head off & Split 15: 72-77) Finney provides an antithetical image to the hurricane Katrina. The two images assert a simple fact, viz., death can

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    Disasters from Hurricane Katrina to wildfires in California. When it comes too natural disasters Hurricanes are by far one of the most devastating. The results can be catastrophic, possibly leaving the death tolls in thousands and leaving millions homeless. Even though the U.S. has responded to and recovered from Hurricanes, Meteorologists are presently not able to predict them early enough, and the U.S. government is unprepared financially, and responsively. Being well prepared for a hurricane is critical

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    Although there were numerous predictions that a category 4 or 5 could hit New Orleans, very little disaster planning or management was accomplished before Katrina hit in August 2005 (Lalwani, et al., 2007, p10). After Katrina made landfall August 29th, several sections of the levee system collapsed including levees protecting the Ninth Ward (Lalwani, et al., 2007, p10). The manmade MRGO channel caused the problems it was predicted; the channel increased the power and the size of the waves that destroyed

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    tremendously. The three disasters that are going to be looked at is Hurricane Sandy, Hurricane Katrina, and the Tohoku earthquake. These three disasters all had negative affects towards the economy. Three major things that happened when these disasters hit was money loss, especially the business that were uninsured, jobs being lost, and companies that had to close down production On October 22nd, 2012 Hurricane Sandy hit. In October of 2012 Hurricane Sandy hit. There was an estimated cost of about $10 billion

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    Analysis of “Risk and Politics of Disaster Coverage in Haiti and Katrina” Introduction and Purpose of the Study The article, “Risk and Politics of Disaster Coverage in Haiti and Katrina,” by Jennifer Petersen of the University of Virginia, which appeared in the journal Communication, Culture & Critique in 2014, provides a comparison and contrast of the media coverage of Hurricane Katrina (2005), which devastated the U.S. Gulf Coast and was the costliest natural disaster in the nation’s history

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