Trending...
- Hiclean Tools Releases HCX2100 Electric Pressure Washer
- Some Music for Donald's Bad Day
- Annual Holiday Open House planned throughout Bavarian Inn shops, stores and more
The Untold Stories 15 Years Later of Overcoming the Challenges
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. - Michimich -- Unfortunately, natural disasters happen and all we can do is plan, evacuate, or take cover and wait for the storm out, deal with the aftermath, and start the rebuilding process. The 2021 hurricane season started on June 1. People who live in coastal areas need to get prepared now. According to the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the worst hurricanes usually occur between September to November, but in May, Tropical disturbance Ana became the 1st named storm this season, so the earlier months can be catastrophic. NOAA predicts another above-normal Atlantic hurricane season. U.S. coastal cities can expect to see between 13-20 named storms this year.
Of course, you remember Hurricane Katrina, one of the most destructive disasters in American history. Many watched as Hurricane Katrina flooded New Orleans as thousands lost their lives, homes, jobs, and everything due to the impact in the tourist city. But, most people have never heard that Mississippi residents were affected by Hurricane Katrina too? The devastation in Mississippi was catastrophic! In fact, the infrastructure including roadways, homes, buildings, schools, businesses, state and federal sites were leveled. Unfortunately, the media did not talk about the impact of Hurricane Katrina on Mississippi or her citizens. So, what happened to the Mississippians who had to deal with Hurricane Katrina? How did Mississippians face the approaching storm, did they evacuate, did they return after the disaster, how did they deal with the lack of media coverage, and where are they today?
More on Michimich.com
Dr. Ophera A. Davis is a public Intellectual, an interdisciplinary social scientist, an affiliate faculty member who taught at several colleges in Boston for over 20 years and she is a "Disaster expert." For the past fifteen years, Dr. Davis's research project has chronicled the lives of black women who survived Hurricane Katrina in Mississippi. Her work is unique in several ways. First, her project is the 'only non-fiction single group of Mississippi Hurricane Katrina Black women survivors' to date on black women. Two, her study is the first work on natural disasters and the recovery of Hurricane Katrina Black women survivors. There is scant data on women disaster survivors in the U.S. and even less on the recovery of black women. Third, Dr. Davis' work fills several gaps in disaster research on women, black disaster survivors and their recovery after catastrophes.
Hurricane Katrina left a long-standing impact on many. There are thousands of stories told about New Orleans survivors, but the stories of Mississippians are ignored. Dr. Davis is releasing the obscured stories from her longitudinal study in her book, "Overlooked Voices Hurricane Katrina Mississippi Black Women Survivors Resilience and Recovery".
More on Michimich.com
The book analyzes these women's lives over ten years and describes their experiences. Also, it explores the lessons they learned and examines the women's buoyancy while discussing how they overcame challenges after Hurricane Katrina. In the book, each woman describes aspects of their resilience and recovery since the disaster. It serves as a platform to bring the hidden narratives and voices of these women to the forefront.
Dr. Davis has given conference talks on six continents on 'Hurricane Katrina, Mississippi women Survivors,' and career Counseling Practices in Multicultural populations. Also, she received the American Counseling Association 'Blue Ribbon' award for her work on Hurricane Katrina Black Women Survivors.
Overlooked Voices: Hurricane Katrina Mississippi Black Women Survivors Resilience and Recovery will be launched in Summer 2021.
Of course, you remember Hurricane Katrina, one of the most destructive disasters in American history. Many watched as Hurricane Katrina flooded New Orleans as thousands lost their lives, homes, jobs, and everything due to the impact in the tourist city. But, most people have never heard that Mississippi residents were affected by Hurricane Katrina too? The devastation in Mississippi was catastrophic! In fact, the infrastructure including roadways, homes, buildings, schools, businesses, state and federal sites were leveled. Unfortunately, the media did not talk about the impact of Hurricane Katrina on Mississippi or her citizens. So, what happened to the Mississippians who had to deal with Hurricane Katrina? How did Mississippians face the approaching storm, did they evacuate, did they return after the disaster, how did they deal with the lack of media coverage, and where are they today?
More on Michimich.com
- NBA Overachievers: OddsTrader Reveals Which Teams Will Exceed Expectations in 2025-26
- Crypto Betting Odds 2025: Bookmakers Review Analyzes Market Predictions and Year-End Price Lines
- CIMdata Webinar on Benchmarking AI in PLM
- Grandville Public Schools Shares Facts Ahead of Nov. 4 School Proposals on Ballot
- The OpenSSL Corporation and the OpenSSL Foundation Celebrate the Success of the Inaugural OpenSSL Conference in Prague
Dr. Ophera A. Davis is a public Intellectual, an interdisciplinary social scientist, an affiliate faculty member who taught at several colleges in Boston for over 20 years and she is a "Disaster expert." For the past fifteen years, Dr. Davis's research project has chronicled the lives of black women who survived Hurricane Katrina in Mississippi. Her work is unique in several ways. First, her project is the 'only non-fiction single group of Mississippi Hurricane Katrina Black women survivors' to date on black women. Two, her study is the first work on natural disasters and the recovery of Hurricane Katrina Black women survivors. There is scant data on women disaster survivors in the U.S. and even less on the recovery of black women. Third, Dr. Davis' work fills several gaps in disaster research on women, black disaster survivors and their recovery after catastrophes.
Hurricane Katrina left a long-standing impact on many. There are thousands of stories told about New Orleans survivors, but the stories of Mississippians are ignored. Dr. Davis is releasing the obscured stories from her longitudinal study in her book, "Overlooked Voices Hurricane Katrina Mississippi Black Women Survivors Resilience and Recovery".
More on Michimich.com
- TKL Group's New Factory Commences Production, Pioneering A New Era In Global Heavy Duty Truck Parts
- Regulated Crypto Exchange TZNXG Addresses Core US Market Challenges with Compliance-First Infrastructure
- GitKraken Launches Insights to Help Engineering Leaders Quantify AI Impact and Improve Developer Experience
- ZapperBox NextGen TV Gateway Receiver Now Testing Support For Secure Whole-Home Content Distribution
- Life as a Dog: P-Wave Press Brings Readers a Heartwarming Memoir of Love, Laughter and Companionship
The book analyzes these women's lives over ten years and describes their experiences. Also, it explores the lessons they learned and examines the women's buoyancy while discussing how they overcame challenges after Hurricane Katrina. In the book, each woman describes aspects of their resilience and recovery since the disaster. It serves as a platform to bring the hidden narratives and voices of these women to the forefront.
Dr. Davis has given conference talks on six continents on 'Hurricane Katrina, Mississippi women Survivors,' and career Counseling Practices in Multicultural populations. Also, she received the American Counseling Association 'Blue Ribbon' award for her work on Hurricane Katrina Black Women Survivors.
Overlooked Voices: Hurricane Katrina Mississippi Black Women Survivors Resilience and Recovery will be launched in Summer 2021.
Source: NetStruc PR
0 Comments
Latest on Michimich.com
- Looking Local: Hug Baan Thai Creates a Cozy Escape in Sterling Heights
- Sterling Heights: Join Us for Our 50+ Programming Open House on Nov. 19
- Swidget Launches Luminance™ to Help Schools Achieve Alyssa's Law Compliance
- Growing Demand for EVA Mats Signals Shift in Car Interior Market
- ADMI Launches Powerful Feature Helps Dealers Maximize Parts Inventory Returns, Minimize Obsolescence
- MDRN MUSE Expands Insurance Network Coverage to Include Delta Dental & Cigna
- Hollywood In Pixels Celebrates the 8th Annual Silver Pixel Awards and Announces 2025 Campaign Pixel Winners Los Angeles, CA — Oct
- Physician Calls for States Nationwide to Ensure ADA Compliance in Independent Commissions
- MEDIA ADVISORY - Strengthening Children's Mental Health Across New Jersey
- NumberSquad Launches Year‑Round Tax Planning Package for Small Businesses and the Self‑Employed
- GlexScale launches a unified model for sustainable SaaS expansion across EMEA
- SwagHer Society Launches to Help Black Women Be Seen and Supported
- Why Philadelphia Homeowners Should Ditch Oil for Natural Gas
- Zero-Trust Architecture: NJTRX Addresses 60% of U.S. Investors' Custody Security Concerns
- Sub-Millisecond Trading Platform: HNZLLQ Introduces Unified Gateway for Philippine Digital Asset Traders
- $2.1B Theft Losses: Bitquore Launches 1M+ TPS Platform with 95% Offline Asset Protection for U.S. Traders
- America Anesthesia Partners Unveils New User-Friendly Website
- Hiclean Tools Releases HCX2100 Electric Pressure Washer
- Bùng Nổ Ra Mắt, AALIVE Tung Gói Thưởng 68% và Dàn Game Thuần Việt Hấp Dẫn
- ARCH Dental + Aesthetics Offers Free Consultations for New Patients