9781610911634-1610911636-Catastrophe in the Making: The Engineering of Katrina and the Disasters of Tomorrow

Catastrophe in the Making: The Engineering of Katrina and the Disasters of Tomorrow

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Summary

Catastrophe in the Making: The Engineering of Katrina and the Disasters of Tomorrow (ISBN-13: 9781610911634 and ISBN-10: 1610911636), written by authors Kai Erikson, William R. Freudenburg, Robert B. Gramling, Shirley Laska, was published by Island Press in 2011. With an overall rating of 3.9 stars, it's a notable title among other Urban & Land Use Planning (Architecture, Development & Growth, Economics, Environmental Economics, State & Local, United States History, Atmospheric Sciences, Earth Sciences, Urban Planning & Development, Social Sciences, Disaster Relief) books. You can easily purchase or rent Catastrophe in the Making: The Engineering of Katrina and the Disasters of Tomorrow (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Urban & Land Use Planning books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.62.

Description

When houses are flattened, towns submerged, and people stranded without electricity or even food, we attribute the suffering to “natural disasters” or “acts of God.” But what if they’re neither? What if we, as a society, are bringing these catastrophes on ourselves?

That’s the provocative theory of Catastrophe in the Making, the first book to recognize Hurricane Katrina not as a “perfect storm,” but a tragedy of our own making—and one that could become commonplace.

The authors, one a longtime New Orleans resident, argue that breached levees and sloppy emergency response are just the most obvious examples of government failure. The true problem is more deeply rooted and insidious, and stretches far beyond the Gulf Coast.

Based on the false promise of widespread prosperity, communities across the U.S. have embraced all brands of “economic development” at all costs. In Louisiana, that meant development interests turning wetlands into shipping lanes. By replacing a natural buffer against storm surges with a 75-mile long, obsolete canal that cost hundreds of millions of dollars, they guided the hurricane into the heart of New Orleans and adjacent communities. The authors reveal why, despite their geographic differences, California and Missouri are building—quite literally—toward similar destruction.

Too often, the U.S. “growth machine” generates wealth for a few and misery for many. Drawing lessons from the most expensive “natural” disaster in American history, Catastrophe in the Making shows why thoughtless development comes at a price we can ill afford.

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