Racial Equity, COVID-19, and Public Policy 2023
DOI: 10.4324/9781003286967-2
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Unmasking Disaster Disparities and Inequality in Local Emergency Management

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“…Further, we expect that the majority of lobbying relates to issues aligned with the interests of corporations and trade associations including legislation and disaster‐related spending rather than on addressing social vulnerability or equity. Although marginalized populations are especially affected by disasters (Cutter et al, 2003; Thomas et al, 2013), these groups remain underserved by emergency managers in all phases of disaster management (Drakes et al, 2021; Gooden et al, 2009; Louis‐Charles et al, n.d. ), and we expect that this is reflected in the descriptions of lobbying reports.…”
Section: Lobbying and Emergency Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Further, we expect that the majority of lobbying relates to issues aligned with the interests of corporations and trade associations including legislation and disaster‐related spending rather than on addressing social vulnerability or equity. Although marginalized populations are especially affected by disasters (Cutter et al, 2003; Thomas et al, 2013), these groups remain underserved by emergency managers in all phases of disaster management (Drakes et al, 2021; Gooden et al, 2009; Louis‐Charles et al, n.d. ), and we expect that this is reflected in the descriptions of lobbying reports.…”
Section: Lobbying and Emergency Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A long history of disaster science scholarship demonstrates that already‐marginalized populations are disproportionately affected by disasters, and federal funds could be more effectively to address these needs (Cutter et al, 2003; Thomas et al, 2013). Yet, these vulnerable communities remain underserved by emergency management agencies (Drakes et al, 2021; Gooden et al, 2009; Louis‐Charles et al, n.d. ), and if public funds are overly focused toward corporate interests as a result of lobbying efforts, this has important normative implications for emergency management in the United States.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%