References
- Arcaya, M., Raker, E. J., & Waters, M. C. (2020). The social consequences of disasters: Individual and community change. Annual Review of Sociology, 46(1), 671–691. doi:10.1146/annurev-soc-121919-054827
- Bates, L. K. (2006). Post-Katrina housing: Problems, policies, and prospects for African-Americans in New Orleans. The Black Scholar, 36(4), 13–31. doi:10.1080/00064246.2006.11413366
- Bay County working hard to establish housing post-Michael. (2019, November 16). The Destin Log. https://www.thedestinlog.com/news/20191116/bay-county-working-hard-to-establish-housing-post-michael#:~:text=There%20were%2088%20apartment%20complexes,households%20were%20displaced%2C%20records%20show
- Benner, C., & Pastor, M. (2012). Just growth: Inclusion and prosperity in America’s metropolitan regions. New York: Routledge.
- Binkovitz, L. (2018). Evictions before and after Harvey. Retrieved from https://kinder.rice.edu/urbanedge/2018/08/23/evictions-and-after-harvey
- Bolin, B. (2007). Race, class, ethnicity, and disaster vulnerability. In H. Rodríguez, E. L. Quarantelli, & R. R. Dynes (Eds.), Handbook of disaster research (pp. 113–129). New York: Springer.
- Bolin, B., & Kurtz, L. C. (2018). Race, class, ethnicity, and disaster vulnerability. In H. Rodríguez, W. Donner, & J. E. Trainor (Eds.), Handbook of disaster research (pp. 181–203). New York: Springer International Publishing. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-63254-4_10
- Bolin, R., & Stanford, L. (1991). Shelter, housing and recovery: A comparison of U.S. disasters. Disasters, 15(1), 24–34.
- Bostick, J. (2020). Bay County housing recovery gaining speed two years after Hurricane Michael. Panama City News Herald. https://www.newsherald.com/story/news/2020/10/04/bay-county-housing-recovery-accelerating-2-years-after-michael/3563000001/
- Brand, A., Seidman, K. (2012). Assessing post-Katrina recovery in New Orleans: Recommendations for equitable rebuilding. Cambridge: Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
- Bratt, R. G. (2002). Housing and family well-being. Housing Studies, 17(1), 13–26.
- Brey, J. (2020). Why Florida was (Almost) a step ahead in emergency tenant protections. NextCity. https://nextcity.org/daily/entry/why-florida-was-almost-a-step-ahead-in-emergency-tenant-protections
- Burgard, S. A., Seefeldt, K. S., & Zelner, S. (2012). Housing instability and health: Findings from the Michigan recession and recovery study. Social Science & Medicine, 75(12), 2215–2224.
- Cassels, L. (2020). New housing assistance for victims of Hurricane Michael starts Sept. 1. Florida Phoenix. 17 August. Available at https://floridaphoenix.com/blog/new-housing-assistance-for-victims-of-hurricane-michael-starts-sept-1/
- Collinson, R., Ellen, I. G., & Ludwig, J. (2016). Low-income housing policy. Economics of Means-Tested Transfer Programs in the United States, Volume II, 2, 59.
- Collinson, R., & Reed, D. (2019). The effects of evictions on low-income households. https://robcollinson.github.io/RobWebsite/jmp_rcollinson.pdf
- Comerio, M. C. (2014). Disaster recovery and community renewal: Housing approaches. Cityscape, 16(2), 51–68.
- Currie, J., & Tekin, E. (2015). Is there a link between foreclosure and health? American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 7(1), 63–94.
- Cutter, S. L., Mitchell, J. T., & Scott, M. S. (2000). Revealing the vulnerability of people and places: A case study of Georgetown County, South Carolina. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 90(4), 713–737.
- DeLuca, S., & Jang–Trettien, C. (2020). “Not Just a Lateral Move”: Residential decisions and the reproduction of urban inequality. City & Community, 19(3), 451–488.
- Deluca, S., Wood, H., & Rosenblatt, P. (2019). Why poor families move (and where they go): Reactive mobility and residential decisions. City & Community, 18(2), 556–593.
- Department of Housing and Urban Development. (2020). Worst case housing needs: 2019 report to congress. https://www.huduser.gov/portal/publications/worst-case-housing-needs-2020.html
- Desmond, M. (2016). Evicted: Poverty and profit in the American city. Crown.
- Desmond, M., Gershenson, C. (2016). Housing and employment insecurity among the working poor. Social Problems, 63(1), 46–67. doi:10.1093/socpro/spv025
- Desmond, M., & Gershenson, C. (2017). Who gets evicted? Assessing individual, neighborhood, and network factors. Social Science Research, 62, 362–377.
- Desmond, M., Kimbro, R. T. (2015). Eviction’s fallout: Housing, hardship, and health. Social Forces, 94(1), 295–324. doi:10.1093/sf/sov044
- Desmond, M., & Perkins, K. L. (2016). Housing and household instability. Urban Affairs Review, 52(3), 421–436.
- Disaster Legal Services. (2020). DisasterAssistance.gov. https://www.disasterassistance.gov/get-assistance/forms-of-assistance/4464
- Ellen, I. G., & Steil, J. (Eds.). (2019). The dream revisited: Contemporary debates about housing, segregation, and opportunity. New York: Columbia University Press.
- Elliott, J. R., Howell, J. (2017). Beyond disasters: A longitudinal analysis of natural hazards’ unequal impacts on residential instability. Social Forces. doi:10.1093/sf/sow086
- FEMA. (2016). National disaster recovery framework. Washington, DC: Author.
- FEMA. (2018). 2017 hurricane season: FEMA after-action report. Washington, DC: Author.
- Ferris, E. (2011). Planned relocations, disasters and climate change. Proceedings of the Climate Change and Migration in the Asia-Pacific: Legal and Policy Responses, Sydney, Australia (pp. 10–11).
- Field, C. B., Barros, V. R., Dokken, D. J., Mach, K. J., Mastrandrea, M. D., Bilir, T. E., … White, L. L. (2014). Climate change 2014: Impacts, adaptation, and vulnerability. contribution of working group II to the fifth assessment report of the intergovernmental panel on climate change (pp. 1132). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Florida Housing Finance Corporation. (2020, January 19). Disaster relief resources and information. https://www.floridahousing.org/programs/special-programs/ship—state-housing-initiatives-partnership-program/disaster-relief#:~:text=The%20Hurricane%20Michael%20Recovery%20Loan,up%20to%20140%20percent%20AMI
- Fothergill, A., Maestas, E. G. M., & Darlington, J. D. (1999). Race, ethnicity and disasters in the United States: A review of the literature. Disasters, 23(2), 156–173.
- Fothergill, A., & Peek, L. (2015). Children of Katrina. Austin: University of Texas Press.
- Fothergill, A., & Peek, L. A. (2004). Poverty and disasters in the United States: A review of recent sociological findings. Natural Hazards, 32(1), 89–110.
- Freemark, Y., & Steil, J. (2021). Local power and the location of subsidized renters in comparative perspective: Public support for low- and moderate-income households in the United States, France, and the United Kingdom. Housing Studies, 1–29. doi:10.1080/02673037.2021.1910628
- GAO. (2009). Disaster housing: FEMA needs more detailed guidance and performance measures to help ensure effective assistance after major disasters (GAO-09-796). https://www.gao.gov/products/gao–09–796
- GAO. (2010). Disaster assistance: Federal assistance for permanent housing primarily benefited homeowners (GAO-10-17). https://www.gao.gov/assets/a300107.html
- García, I. (2021). Deemed ineligible: Reasons homeowners in Puerto Rico were denied aid after Hurricane María. Housing Policy Debate, 1–21.
- Greenberg, D., Gershenson, C., & Desmond, M. (2016). Discrimination in evictions: Empirical evidence and legal challenges (Harv. CR-CLL Rev., 51, 115).
- Hamideh, S., & Rongerude, J. (2018). Social vulnerability and participation in disaster recovery decisions: Public housing in Galveston after Hurricane Ike. Natural Hazards, 93(3), 1629–1648.
- Hernández, D., Chang, D., Hutchinson, C., Hill, E., Almonte, A., Burns, R., … Evans, D. (2018). Public housing on the periphery: Vulnerable residents and depleted resilience reserves post-Hurricane Sandy. Journal of Urban Health, 95(5), 703–715.
- Howell, J., Elliott, J. R. (2018). As disaster costs rise, so does inequality. Socius, 4, 237802311881679. doi:10.1177/2378023118816795
- Howell, J., & Elliott, J. R. (2019). Damages done: The longitudinal impacts of natural hazards on wealth inequality in the United States. Social Problems, 66(3), 448–467. doi:10.1093/socpro/spy016
- Humphries, J. E., Mader, N. S., Tannenbaum, D. I., & van Dijk, W. L. (2019). Does eviction cause poverty? Quasi-experimental evidence from Cook County, IL. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research. https://www.nber.org/papers/w26139
- Immergluck, D., Ernsthausen, J., Earl, S., & Powell, A. (2020). Evictions, large owners, and serial filings: Findings from Atlanta. Housing Studies, 35(5), 903–924. doi:10.1080/02673037.2019.1639635
- Joint Center for Housing Studies. (2019). The state of the nation’s housing: 2019. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University. https://www.jchs.harvard.edu/sites/default/files/Harvard_JCHS_State_of_the_Nations_Housing_2019.pdf
- Joint Center for Housing Studies. (2020). America’s rental housing: 2020. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University. https://www.jchs.harvard.edu/americas-rental-housing–2020
- Kaminski, M. (2019). Housing insecurity in South Carolina [Unpublished Master’s thesis]. Clemson, SC: Clemson University.
- Kothari, M. (2009). Report of the special rapporteur on adequate housing as a component of the right to an adequate standard of living, and on the right to non-discrimination in this context. A/HRC/10/7/Add.3. New York: UN Human Rights Council.
- Kothari, M. (2015). The global crisis of displacement and evictions: A housing and land rights response. City Series No. 2. New York: Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung.
- Lee, J. Y., & Van Zandt, S. (2019). Housing tenure and social vulnerability to disasters: A review of the evidence. Journal of Planning Literature, 34(2), 156–170. doi:10.1177/0885412218812080
- Levine, J. N., Esnard, A.-M., & Sapat, A. (2007). Population displacement and housing dilemmas due to catastrophic disasters. Journal of Planning Literature, 22(1), 3–15.
- Lizarralde, G., Fayazi, M., Kikano, F., & Thomas, I. (2017). 15 meta-patterns in post-disaster housing reconstruction and recovery. In A. Sapat & A. M. Esnard (Eds.), Coming home after disaster: Multiple dimensions of housing recovery (pp. 229–245). New York: CRC Press.
- Mehta, A., Brennan, M., & Steil, J. (2020). Affordable housing, disasters, and social equity: LIHTC as a tool for preparedness and recovery. Journal of the American Planning Association, 86(1), 75–88.
- Mitchell, T. W. (2000). From reconstruction to deconstruction: Undermining Black landownership, political independence, and community through partition sales of tenancies in common. Northwestern University Law Review, 95(2), 505–580.
- Mitchell, T. W., Malpezzi, S., & Green, R. K. (2009). Forced sale risk: Class, race, and the double discount. Florida State University Law Review, 37(3), 589–658.
- Morrow, B. H. (1999). Identifying and mapping community vulnerability. Disasters, 23(1), 1–18.
- National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. (2018). Permanent supportive housing: Evaluating the evidence for improving health outcomes among people experiencing chronic homelessness. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi:10.17226/25133
- Nelson, K., Garboden, P., McCabe, B. J., & Rosen, E. (2021). Evictions: The comparative analysis problem. Housing Policy Debate, 31(3–5), 696–716. doi:10.1080/10511482.2020.1867883
- NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. (2021). U.S. billion-dollar weather and climate disasters. https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/billions/
- Peacock, W. G., Dash, N., & Zhang, Y. (2007). Sheltering and housing recovery following disaster. In H. Rodríguez, E. L. Quarantelli, & R. R. Dynes (Eds.), Handbook of disaster research (pp. 258–274). New York: Springer. doi:10.1007/978-0-387-32353-4_15
- Peacock, W. G., & Girard, C. (1997). Ethnic and racial inequalities in hurricane damage and insurance settlements. In W. G. Peacock, B. H. Morrow, & H. Gladwin (Eds.), Hurricane Andrew: Ethnicity, gender and the sociology of disasters (pp. 171–190). Milton Park, UK: Routledge.
- Peacock, W. G., Zandt, S. V., Zhang, Y., & Highfield, W. E. (2014). Inequities in long-term housing recovery after disasters. Journal of the American Planning Association, 80(4), 356–371. doi:10.1080/01944363.2014.980440
- Perls, H. (2020). U.S. Disaster displacement in the era of climate change: Discrimination and consultation under the stafford act. Harvard Environmental Law Review, 44, 511–552.
- Pollock, J. (2012). Recent studies compare full representation to limited assistance in eviction cases (National Housing Law Bulletin, 42).
- Porton, A., Gromis, A., & Desmond, M. (2020). Inaccuracies in eviction records: Implications for renters and researchers. Housing Policy Debate, 1–18. doi:10.1080/10511482.2020.1748084
- Raymond, E. L., Duckworth, R., Miller, B., Lucas, M., & Pokharel, S. (2018). From foreclosure to eviction: Housing insecurity in corporate-owned single-family rentals. Cityscape, 20(3), 159–188. https://www.huduser.gov/portal/periodicals/cityscpe/vol20num3/Cityscape-November_2018.pdf#page=165
- Reale, A., & Handmer, J. (2011). Land tenure, disasters and vulnerability. Disasters, 35(1), 160–182.
- Reeves, A. (2011). Political disaster: Unilateral powers, electoral incentives, and presidential disaster declarations. The Journal of Politics, 73(4), 1142–1151.
- Robinson, D., & Steil, J. (2021). Eviction dynamics in market-rate multifamily rental housing. Housing Policy Debate, 1–23. doi:10.1080/10511482.2020.1839936
- Rumbach, A. (2017). At the roots of urban disasters: Planning and uneven geographies of risk in Kolkata, India. Journal of Urban Affairs, 39(6), 783–799.
- Rumback, A., & Makaraeicz, C. (2017). Affordable housing and disaster recovery: A case study of the 2013 colorado floods. In A. Sapat & A. M. Esnard (Eds.), (2016). Coming home after disaster: Multiple dimensions of housing recovery (pp. 99–113). New York: CRC Press.
- Salkowe, R. S., & Chakraborty, J. (2009). Federal disaster relief in the U.S.: The role of political partisanship and preference in presidential disaster declarations and turndowns. Journal of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, 6(1). doi:10.2202/1547-7355.1562
- Sandel, M., Sheward, R., de Cuba, S. E., Coleman, S. M., Frank, D. A., Chilton, M., … Cutts, D. (2018). Unstable housing and caregiver and child health in renter families. Pediatrics, 141(2), e20172199.
- Sapat, A., Esnard, A. M. (Eds.). (2017). Coming home after disasters. New York: Routledge.
- Schmidtlein, M. C., Finch, C., & Cutter, S. L. (2008). Disaster declarations and major hazard occurrences in the United States. The Professional Geographer, 60(1), 1–14.
- Schultheis, H., & Rooney, C. (2019). A right to counsel is a right to a fighting chance. Center for American Progress. https://www.americanprogress.org/issues/poverty/reports/2019/10/02/475263/right-counsel-right-fighting-chance/#:~:text=In%20eviction%20lawsuits%20nationwide%2C%20an,cases%20and%20are%20ultimately%20evicted
- Schultz, J., & Elliott, J. R. (2013). Natural disasters and local demographic change in the United States. Population and Environment, 34(3), 293–312.
- Steil, J. (2018). Antisubordination planning. Journal of Planning Education and Research, 0739456X1881573. doi:10.1177/0739456X18815739
- Steil, J., Kelly, N., Vale, L., & Woluchem, M. (Eds). (2021). Furthering fair housing: Prospects for racial justice in America’s neighborhoods. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press.
- Teresa, B. (2018). The geography of eviction in richmond: Beyond poverty. https://cura.vcu.edu/media/cura/pdfs/cura-documents/GeographiesofEviction.pdf
- The Eviction Lab. (2018, May 11). National estimates: Eviction in America. National Estimates: Eviction in America. https://evictionlab.org/national-estimates/
- Thomas, T., Toomet, O., Kennedy, I., & Ramiller, A. (2019). The state of evictions: Results from the University of Washington evictions project. University of Washington. https://evictions.study/washington/
- Tierney, K. J. (2019). Disasters: A sociological approach. New York: Wiley.
- U.S. Census Bureau. (2020). 2019 American community survey 1-year sample table DP04. https://data.census.gov/cedsci/table?d=ACS%201-Year%20Estimates%20Data%20Profiles&tid=ACSDP1Y2019.DP04&hidePreview=tru
- Vigdor, J. (2008). The economic aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 22(4), 135–154.
- Wisner, B., Blaikie, P., Cannon, T., Davis, I. (1994). At risk. Abingdon, UK: Taylor & Francis. doi:10.4324/9780203428764
- Zhang, Y. (2010). Residential housing choice in a multihazard environment: Implications for natural hazards mitigation and community environmental justice. Journal of Planning Education and Research, 30(2), 117–131.