Fractured landscapes: The racialization of home buyout programs and climate adaptation

被引:17
作者
Zavar, Elyse [1 ]
Fischer, Lauren Ames [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ North Texas, Dept Emergency Management & Disaster Sci, 410 Ave C, Denton, TX 76203 USA
[2] Univ North Texas, Dept Publ Adm, Urban Planning & Policy, 410 Ave C, Denton, TX 76203 USA
来源
CURRENT RESEARCH IN ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY | 2021年 / 3卷
关键词
Climate mitigation; Coproduction of knowledge; Color -evasive policy; Managed retreat; Redlining; Urban planning; CRITICAL RACE THEORY; COLOR-BLIND; ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE; VULNERABILITY; RESILIENCE; KNOWLEDGE; POLICY; COPRODUCTION; NEIGHBORHOOD; COMMUNITIES;
D O I
10.1016/j.crsust.2021.100043
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The paper analyzes the intersection of racialized land development and U.S. buyout programs to advance a framework for socially sustainable climate adaptation. Using GIS and content analysis, we examine the relationship between the site of contemporary buyout programs and neighborhoods surveyed in the 1930s by the Home Owners' Loan Corpora-tion (HOLC). To evaluate whether buyout programs are more likely to occur in redlined neighborhoods, we identify the spatial patterns and associations between these two policies. We find that the majority of FEMA-funded buyouts occurring in HOLC-surveyed cities were located outside of graded zones; yet for the buyouts occurring in the graded historic urban core, the majority were located in redlined districts. We then consider how the language used to de-scribe each neighborhood by the HOLC characterizes amenity and hazard and how these descriptions influenced later policy interventions. Using buyouts and HOLC as an example, we engage the color-evasive policy literature to argue for climate adoption policies that recognize the racialized history that has produced unequal vulnerabilities to hazards rather than relying on buyouts as a technical solution to climate change. Moving past recognition towards an agenda of action, we contend that co-production of knowledge is essential to inform environmental-decision mak-ing and that the sustainability research community and its allied fields must center environmental justice frameworks for equitable climate adaptation.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 117 条
  • [1] Aaronson D., 2020, The Effects of the 1930s HOLC "Redlining" Maps
  • [2] Global mismatch between greenhouse gas emissions and the burden of climate change
    Althor, Glenn
    Watson, James E. M.
    Fuller, Richard A.
    [J]. SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2016, 6
  • [3] Equity Impacts of Urban Land Use Planning for Climate Adaptation: Critical Perspectives from the Global North and South
    Anguelovski, Isabelle
    Shi, Linda
    Chu, Eric
    Gallagher, Daniel
    Goh, Kian
    Lamb, Zachary
    Reeve, Kara
    Teicher, Hannah
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PLANNING EDUCATION AND RESEARCH, 2016, 36 (03) : 333 - 348
  • [4] Conceptualizing color-evasiveness: using dis/ability critical race theory to expand a color-blind racial ideology in education and society
    Annamma, Subini Ancy
    Jackson, Darrell D.
    Morrison, Deb
    [J]. RACE ETHNICITY AND EDUCATION, 2017, 20 (02) : 147 - 162
  • [5] [Anonymous], 1962, The urban villagers
  • [6] [Anonymous], 2010, American Factfinder
  • [7] [Anonymous], 2000, Citizens, Experts and the Environment
  • [8] [Anonymous], 2018, CITIES URBAN AGE
  • [9] [Anonymous], 2017, MITIG ADAPT STRAT GL, DOI DOI 10.1007/s11027-016-9725-9
  • [10] Arnold JosephL., 1988, The Evolution of the 1936 Flood Control Act