Showing 61 - 80 results of 254 for search '"Hurricane Katrina"', query time: 0.13s Refine Results
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    Public Libraries Can Play an Important Role in the Aftermath of a Natural Disaster. A Review of: Welsh, T. S. & Higgins, S. E. (2009). Public libraries post-Hurricane Katrina: A pilot study. Library Review, 58(9), 652-659. by Virginia Wilson

    Published 2010-09-01
    “…<b>Objective</b> – This paper analyzes Hurricane Katrina-related narratives to document the challenges faced by public libraries after the disaster and the disaster-relief services these libraries provided.…”
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    Unnatural Pet-Keeping by Amir Zelinger

    Published 2018-02-01
    “… This paper embeds pet-keeping into the scholarship on Hurricane Katrina. Recent research into Hurricane Katrina has mostly emphasized the social significance of this natural disaster, maintaining that issues of class, race, and social inequality were responsible for the extent of the catastrophe and for the fact that certain populations suffered much more severely than others. …”
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    Katrina, One Year Later: Three Perspectives by Todd Bertolaet, Bruce West, David Wharton

    Published 2008-02-01
    “…Louis, Gulfport, Long Beach, Pass Christian, Biloxi, Waveland, and points in between uncovering the new post-Hurricane Katrina environment.…”
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    New Orleans: The Long-Term Demographic Trends by Carl L. Bankston III

    Published 2010-06-01
    “…If this view is taken, New Orleans is currently about where the population would have been expected to be even without Hurricane Katrina's damages to the community.…”
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    Human Response to Natural Disasters by Dara Nix-Stevenson

    Published 2013-07-01
    “…This occurs not necessarily and merely through a “natural” disaster, as the Boxer Day Tsunami or Hurricane Katrina, but through processes of social, political, and economic disempowerment associated with prior racialized histories and inequitable access to cultural capital.…”
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  18. 78

    The Generalized STAR Modeling with Heteroscedastic Effects by Utriweni Mukhaiyar, Syahri Ramadhani

    Published 2022-03-01
    “…As a case study, the GSTAR–ARCH model was applied to the daily mean wind speed data of New Orleans, Florida and Mississippi to predict the occurrence of Hurricane Katrina that occurred in 2005. The results obtained show that the GSTAR model (3;0,0,1)–ARCH(1) predicts Hurricane Katrina very well.…”
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    Did Harvey Learn from Katrina? Initial Observations of the Response to Companion Animals during Hurricane Harvey by Steve Glassey

    Published 2018-03-01
    “…The aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005 became the genesis of animal emergency management and created significant reforms in the US particularly the passage of the Pets Emergency and Transportation Standards Act in 2006 that required state and local emergency management arrangements to be pet- and service animal-inclusive. …”
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