Environmental Challenges and Prospects for Community Relocation in Houston and Port Arthur, Texas: Proceedings of a Workshop
English
By (author): and Medicine Board on Environmental Change and Society Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education Engineering National Academies of Sciences
Strategically moving communities and infrastructureincluding homes and businessesaway from environmentally high-risk areas, such as vulnerable coastal regions, has been referred to as managed retreat. Of all the ways humans respond to climate-related disasters, managed retreat has been one of the most controversial due to the difficulty inherent in identifying when, to where, by whom, and the processes by which such movement should take place. In 2021, the Gulf Research Program of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine sponsored a two-year consensus study, Managed Retreat in the U.S. Gulf Coast Region, to learn about and respond to the unique challenges associated with managed retreat. As part of this study, the committee convened a series of three public workshops in 2022 in the Gulf Coast region to gather information for the consensus report. Each workshop focused on policy and practice considerations, research and data needs, and community engagement strategies. This proceedings recounts the first workshop in Houston and Port Arthur, Texas.
Table of Contents- Front Matter
- 1 Introduction and Background
- 2 Part One: Buyouts and Other Forms of Strategic Relocation in Greater Houston, Texas
- 3 Strategic Relocation and Environmental Perception: Community Perspectives from Port Arthur, Texas
- Appendix A: Public Workshop Agendas
- Appendix B: Participant Biographies