Special Journal Issues (Public List)
Persons
Research Resources
Journal Articles
- Kenneth A. Lachlan, Patric Spence. Hazard and Outrage: Developing a Psychometric Instrument in the Aftermath of Katrina. Journal of Applied Communication Research. 2007.
- Andrea M. Quenette, Robert S. Littlefield. Crisis Leadership and Hurricane Katrina: The Portrayal of Authority by the Media in Natural Disasters. Journal of Applied Communication Research. 2007.
- Joyce E. King, Clyde C. Robertson. Bo Feerey: A Teaching and Learning Methodology for Healing the Wounds of Distance, Displacement, and Loss Caused by Hurricane Katrina. Journal of Black Studies. 2007.
- Patrick Sharkey. Survival and Death in New Orleans: An Empirical Look at the Human Impact of Katrina. Journal of Black Studies.
- . Stewardship Politics and the Control of Wild Weather: Levees, Seawalls, and State Building in 17th-Century France. Social Studies of Science.
- Rogelio Saenz, Walter Gillis Peacock. Rural People, Rural Places: The Hidden Costs of Hurricane Katrina. Rural Realities.
- . Introduction to Special Issue on the 2005 Atlantic Hurricane Season. Journal of Applied Communication Research.
- . From the Freedmen’s Bureau to FEMA: A Post-Katrina Historical, Journalistic, and Literary Analysis. Journal of Black Studies.
- Ernest McGowen, Kristin Wylie, Tasha S. Philpot, Ismail White. Feeling the Pain of My People: Hurricane Katrina, Racial Inequality, and the Psyche of Black America. Journal of Black Studies.
- . Emergent Agents: The Forgotten Publics in Crisis Communication and Issues Management Research. Journal of Applied Communication Research.
- . Emergency Communication Challenges in Response to Hurricane Katrina: Lessons from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Journal of Applied Communication Research.
- . Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans? Internet Communication, Geographic Community, and Social Capital in Crisis. Journal of Applied Communication Research.
- . Distributing Risks and Responsibilities: Flood Hazard Mitigation in New Orleans. Social Studies of Science.
- DeMond Miller, Jason David Rivera. Continually Neglected: Situating Natural Disasters in the African American Experience. Journal of Black Studies.
- . Conceptualizing Continuous Coverage: A Strategic Model for Wall-to-Wall Local Television Weather Broadcasts. Journal of Applied Communication Research.
- . Book Review: Come Hell or High Water: Hurricane Katrina and the Color of Disaster . Journal of Black Studies.
- . American and Dutch Coastal Engineering: Differences in Risk Conception and Differences in Technological Culture. Social Studies of Science.
- Export Formats:
- CSV (MS Excel)
- BibTeX
- EndNote