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Hurricane Katrina
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Hurricane Katrina was a catastrophic 2005 storm that devastated the Gulf Coast, most severely New Orleans and the surrounding Louisiana region. It remains one of the most studied disaster events in American academic life because it sits at the intersection of meteorology, public policy, sociology, and emergency management. Students across disciplines — from political science and urban studies to social work and public administration — write about Katrina because it exposes systemic failures and raises durable questions about how governments, communities, and institutions respond when a city faces near-total collapse.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of analytical approaches. Many focus on policy and governance, examining U.S. domestic policy failures, the mechanics of emergency management frameworks such as NIMS, and the four phases of mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery. Others take a social justice angle, analyzing how race and class shaped who suffered most and who received help first. Additional papers narrow to specific affected populations, including children who were displaced and scattered after the storm, or zoom out to assess the economic impact on the job market. Case-study approaches centering on New Orleans are especially common.

A strong essay on Hurricane Katrina needs a focused thesis rather than a broad survey of everything that went wrong. Evidence drawn from policy documents, demographic data, and documented government responses carries the most academic weight. Writers should connect specific failures — logistical, political, or social — to concrete outcomes for communities and families. The most common pitfall is treating Katrina as purely a natural disaster; examiners expect essays to engage seriously with the human decisions and structural inequalities that determined who survived and how recovery unfolded.

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Paper Doctorate
Human activities and impacts on global warming
This is a brief introduction to global warming. Global warming, also called climate change, is a phenomenon that not only is a threat to other species but also has the potential drastically change the climate so that it has severe and negative consequences for the human population of the planet. The definition of global warming is as follows: The gradual increase in the temperature of the earth's atmosphere, believed to be due to the greenhouse effect caused by gases, such as Carbon Dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels or from deforestation, which trap heat that would otherwise escape from Earth; a type of greenhouse effect. Global warming, which is at least partly due to the rising concentrations of greenhouses in the atmosphere, is generally noted by primary source of greenhouse gases which is carbon dioxide (CO2).
Paper Doctorate
Life That What Once May Have Been
¶ … life that what once may have been a derogatory word for something may have, over the years, come to mean something entirely different, and in a similar fashion, what was once a term of endearment or something…
Paper Undergraduate
Flooding lessons learned from disaster management
One of the more serious natural disasters that affected the United States in recent years was that of Hurricane Katrina, a 2005 disaster that had over a $100 billion effect on the U.S.
Research Paper Doctorate
Emergence of the Civil Rights Movement From 1950 to 1960
The Civil Rights Movement that began in 1950 was an attempt to address the state of inequality that had existed in Black and White America since the nation's conception. The Movement began as a demand to get 'payment'…
Research Paper Doctorate
Topics in academic research and study
The Next Decade for the U.S. Airline Industry
Paper Undergraduate
Geology concepts and applications
This study answers 20 questions and discusses which of the interrelationships between the environmental spheres, in your experience, has had the biggest effect on human society, or vice versa. Examples are provided. A specifically important aspect of the atmosphere is that the atmosphere serves a vital protective function in that it absorbs highly energetic ultraviolet radiation from the sun that would kill living organisms exposed to it. The atmosphere stabilizes the temperature of the earth and is the medium in which water evaporated from oceans as the first step in the hydrologic cycle is transported over land masses to fall as rain over land." (Manahan, 2005)
Research Paper Doctorate
Income Gap Hurricane Katrina Stuck
Hurricane Katrina stuck America hard and the realities came to the fore. The issues of poverty and discrimination that were synonymous with the developing world appeared on front pages in the newspapers not just in the…
Essay Doctorate
Functions Should Be Outsourced at Your Company
¶ … functions should be outsourced at your company (Insurance Company), how and why?
Paper Undergraduate
Haiti Is Not Katrina Custom
Kathleen Tierney, the author of "Haiti is not Katrina," is a professor of sociology and behavioral science director of the Natural Hazards Center at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
Paper Undergraduate
Heat Deaths and Illnesses/Post-katrina Reforms
Heat related deaths are completely preventable. All a person needs to avoid dying from the heat is to remain at a temperature where that person can function normally and not be injured by the weather.