Rising recreancy: flood control and community relocation in Houston,TX, from an environmental justice perspective |
| |
Authors: | Kevin Lynn |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of Sociology, Criminology &2. Law, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA |
| |
Abstract: | This article looks at issues of recreancy, environmental justice, and relocation as they relate to a flood control infrastructure project in inner city Houston. The main research questions were “What forms would recreancy take?” and “Can a project be environmentally just if recreancy is present?” Through the structural coding of 53 semi-structured interviews, recreancy was found even in a project where the sponsors used community cohesion as a guideline. This article illuminates the difficulties flood control project engineers face when working in local communities and argues that engineering issues are also social issues. Further, the relocatees within this flood control project voice some of the same concerns experienced by people relocated in other involuntary infrastructure development projects. The case outlined in this article could be used to better help those involuntarily relocated for flood control. |
| |
Keywords: | Environmental justice executive order 12898 flooding Houston TX recreancy |
|
|