Bureau of Labor Statistics, Washington, DC, USA.
Demography. 2010 Nov;47(4):821-44. doi: 10.1007/BF03214587.
This article examines the decision of Hurricane Katrina evacuees to return to their pre-Katrina areas and documents how the composition of the Katrina-affected region changed over time. Using data from the Current Population Survey, we show that an evacuee's age, family income, and the severity of damage in an evacuee's county of origin are important determinants of whether an evacuee returned during the first year after the storm. Blacks were less likely to return than whites, but this difference is primarily related to the geographical pattern of storm damage rather than to race per se. The difference between the composition of evacuees who returned and the composition of evacuees who did not return is the primary force behind changes in the composition of the affected areas in the first two years after the storm. Katrina is associated with substantial shifts in the racial composition of the affected areas (namely, a decrease in the percentage of residents who are black) and an increasing presence of Hispanics. Katrina is also associated with an increase in the percentage of older residents, a decrease in the percentage of residents with low income/education, and an increase in the percentage of residents with high income/education.
本文考察了卡特里娜飓风灾民返回他们卡特里娜飓风前地区的决定,并记录了卡特里娜飓风受灾地区的构成随时间的变化。利用来自当前人口调查的数据,我们表明,灾民的年龄、家庭收入以及原籍县受灾的严重程度是决定灾民在风暴发生后的第一年是否返回的重要决定因素。黑人返回的可能性低于白人,但这种差异主要与风暴破坏的地理模式有关,而不是种族本身。返回的灾民和未返回的灾民之间的构成差异是风暴后两年受灾地区构成变化的主要原因。卡特里娜飓风导致受灾地区的种族构成发生了重大变化(即,黑人居民的比例下降),并且西班牙裔人口的比例增加。卡特里娜飓风还与老年居民比例的增加、低收入/低教育程度居民比例的下降以及高收入/高教育程度居民比例的增加有关。