Reconceptualizing Social Vulnerability in Brunswick, Georgia: Critical Physical Geography and the Future of Sea-Level Rise

IF 0.6 Q3 GEOGRAPHY Southeastern Geographer Pub Date : 2021-11-01 DOI:10.1353/sgo.2021.0023
Eric Spears
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

abstract:Sea-level rise (SLR) is a future concern on Georgia's coastline. SLR research on Georgia's Atlantic coastline often focuses on infrastructure, commerce, and private home ownership. Little geographic research, however, is given to the anticipated effects of SLR on low-income African Americans living in public housing. Brunswick, a small port city, is a "minority majority" city with 56 percent of its population classified as African American and 37 percent as in poverty. Many African Americans, especially those with the lowest incomes, live in flood-prone areas of the coastal city. The city's physical geography exacerbates the threat of SLR with sinking land and rising waters. A critical examination of how environmental injustice, hazards geography, and physical geography intersect is fundamental to addressing Brunswick's vulnerabilities in the next fifty years. Specific attention will be given to Hopkins Homes, which is a public housing unit located by the city's port. Hopkins Homes is one of the most socially vulnerable places in Brunswick but is not factored into the city's response plans. A critical physical geography (CPG) perspective is used as an epistemology for guiding future decisions about SLR vulnerability in Brunswick.
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重新定义不伦瑞克,格鲁吉亚的社会脆弱性:关键自然地理和海平面上升的未来
海平面上升(SLR)是乔治亚州海岸线未来面临的一个问题。对佐治亚州大西洋海岸线的单反研究通常集中在基础设施、商业和私人住房所有权上。然而,很少有地理研究给出单反对居住在公共住房中的低收入非洲裔美国人的预期影响。不伦瑞克是一个小港口城市,是一个“少数民族占多数”的城市,56%的人口属于非洲裔美国人,37%的人口属于贫困人口。许多非裔美国人,尤其是收入最低的非裔美国人,生活在这座沿海城市的洪水易发地区。城市的自然地理加剧了单反的威胁,土地下沉,水位上升。对环境不公、危害地理学和自然地理学如何交叉进行批判性研究,是解决未来50年不伦瑞克脆弱性的基础。特别关注的是霍普金斯住宅,这是一个位于城市港口的公共住房单位。霍普金斯家园是不伦瑞克社会最脆弱的地方之一,但却没有被纳入城市的应对计划。关键自然地理学(CPG)观点被用作指导不伦瑞克省SLR脆弱性未来决策的认识论。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
14.30%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: The Southeastern Geographer is a biannual publication of the Southeastern Division of Association of American Geographers. The journal has published the academic work of geographers and other social and physical scientists since 1961. Peer-reviewed articles and essays are published along with book reviews, organization and conference reports, and commentaries. The journal welcomes manuscripts on any geographical subject as long as it reflects sound scholarship and contains significant contributions to geographical understanding.
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