Ecologies of Inequity

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Black immigrants
Brooklyn
Canarsie
Caribbean immigrants
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CBOs
Church leaders
Churches
citizenship inequality
city
class inequality
coalition
Community-based Organizations
conversational interview
Crisis capital
disadvantage
Disaster
disaster area
disaster inequality
disaster management
disaster relief centers
disaster relief organizations
disaster responders
disaster response
disaster response area
disaster survivors
disaster victims
Ecological Racism
Ecologies
Ecology
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eq_society-politics
ethnography
federal disaster assistance
FEMA
governmental
inequity
interview
legal status
narrative analysis
narrative inquiry
New York City
NGO (s)
nongovernmental organization (s)
observation
organization agglomeration
organization networks
organizational inequities
participant observation
poor
poverty
privatization
race inequality
Racial inequality
relational inequality
resilience
social capital
social capital inequality
Social capital networks
Social networks
social relations
socioeconomic status
The Rockaway peninsula
The Rockaways
undocumented immigrants
urban areas
Urban communities
urban disaster
Urban ethnography
urban poor
urban space
voluntarism
volunteers

Product details

  • ISBN 9780820363806
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Aug 2023
  • Publisher: University of Georgia Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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With Ecologies of Inequity, Sancha Doxilly Medwinter tells the story of how the racially and ethnically diverse, immigrant, and urban poor disaster survivors lose ground to their White, middleclass-to-affluent and Black middle-class homeowner neighbors during official disaster response. Medwinter presents analyses from 120 conversational and expert interviews with disaster responders and survivors in New York City, beginning as early as twelve days after the November 2012 landfall of Superstorm Sandy. The settings are Carnarsie, Brooklyn, and the Rockaway peninsula, which experienced six to eight feet of flooding.

The color- and class-blind assumptions of disaster responders and the labyrinthine process of obtaining a FEMA grant combine to exclude and increase the psychological burden of urban poor disaster survivors. Similarly, the locational decisions and volunteer service perimeters uncritically replicate the segregation logics of urban spaces. Part of this story explains how the chronically poor repeatedly get displaced by the machinery of official disaster response. One reason is the introduction of a race- and class-blind disaster “logic of response” that caters to the needs of the newly created class of “disaster victims,” while displacing the “logic of service,” which typically attempts to address the needs of the chronically poor.

SANCHA DOXILLY MEDWINTER is an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.