Environment, Disaster, and Race After Katrina

The ized southern racism United against States African has Americans. a long history Hurricane of coping Katrina with weatherhit the related region disasters in a particularly and a legacy vulnerable of institutionalplace, ized acism against African America s. Hurricane Katrina hit the region in a particularly vulnerable place, pushing right up against an industrial corridor running from New Orleans to Baton Rouge, popularly known as "Cancer Alley," a place that is host to both numerous petrochemical complexes and many poor African American communities that have long complained of environmental disparities. It is no coincidence that the storm's most dramatic effects were felt in a city where black reliance on public transit was four times higher than that of whites, and where the public plans for evacuation were tragically deficient.