服务不足的人口是否被排除在国家防洪工作之外并面临更大的影响?在人口普查区层面评估种族不平等的方法

Andrew Kruczkiewicz, C. Hultquist, Maya Dutta, Ryan Iyer
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摘要

发展政策有系统地将某些人口转移到不受欢迎的地方,包括有洪水风险的地区。随着时间的推移,许多财产将不再适合居住,其他财产将遭受严重洪水的破坏。当前的美国联邦政策为减轻洪水风险的措施提供资金,如财产收购、搬迁和改造;然而,根据次县一级的各种因素,这些行动在某些情况下可能会给高收入地区(主要是白人地区)带来不成比例的好处,而未能适当惠及服务不足和暴露的人口。在这里,我们提出了一种探索性方法,建立在现有的项目范围和特定事件分析研究的基础上,探索允许州和县级决策者识别联邦资金不平等的模式,可能支持重新确定优先级。本工作评估了1975年至2019年的国家洪水保险计划(NFIP)索赔数据和1989年至2018年的联邦紧急事务管理局(FEMA)减灾工作,以探索与县与县之间种族不成比例相关的减灾措施的分布(例如,白人占多数的县中大多数非白人人口普查区)。我们发现,在白人占多数的县中,非白人占多数的人口普查区,NFIP申请的数量不成比例地少。这支持了之前的工作,即这些地区在洪水恢复、恢复力和准备方面的援助水平较低。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Are Underserved Populations Left Out of National Flood Mitigation Efforts and Facing Greater Impact? A Method to Assess Racial Inequality at the Census Tract Level
Abstract Development policies have systematically relegated certain populations to undesirable locations including areas at risk of flooding. Over time many properties will no longer be inhabitable and others will see damage from significant flooding. Current U.S. federal policy funds flood risk mitigation measures, such as property acquisition, relocation, and retrofitting; however, depending on various factors at the subcounty level, these actions can in some contexts provide disproportionate benefit to higher income, mostly White areas, failing to appropriately benefit underserved and exposed populations. Here, we present an exploratory method, building off existing research on programmatic-wide and event-specific analysis to explore patterns allowing state- and county-level decision-makers to identify inequalities in federal funding, potentially supporting reprioritization. This work evaluates the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) claims data from 1975 to 2019 and Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) mitigation efforts from 1989 to 2018 to explore the distribution of mitigation measures related to tract to county racial disproportionalities (for example, majority non-White census tracts in majority White counties). We find that for majority non-White census tracts in majority White counties, there are disproportionately fewer NFIP claims. This supports previous work, which shows lower levels of assistance in flood recovery, resilience, and preparedness in these areas.
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