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High-resolution human mobility data reveal race and wealth disparities in disaster evacuation patterns

Social Work

High-resolution human mobility data reveal race and wealth disparities in disaster evacuation patterns

H. Deng, D. P. Aldrich, et al.

This intriguing research explores how race and wealth intertwine to influence disaster evacuation behavior during Hurricane Harvey, revealing stark disparities in evacuation likelihood and patterns among different demographics. Conducted by a team of experts including Hengfang Deng and Daniel P. Aldrich, the study sheds light on critical social inequalities in emergency response.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Major disasters such as extreme weather events can magnify and exacerbate pre-existing social disparities, with disadvantaged populations bearing disproportionate costs. Despite the implications for equity and emergency planning, we lack a quantitative understanding of how these social fault lines translate to different behaviours in large-scale emergency contexts. Here we investigate this problem in the context of Hurricane Harvey, using over 30 million anonymized GPS records from over 150,000 opted-in users in the Greater Houston Area to quantify patterns of disaster-inflicted relocation activities before, during, and after the shock. We show that evacuation distance is highly homogenous across individuals from different types of neighbourhoods classified by race and wealth, obeying a truncated power-law distribution. Yet here the similarities end: we find that both race and wealth strongly impact evacuation patterns, with disadvantaged minority populations less likely to evacuate than wealthier white residents. Finally, there are considerable discrepancies in terms of departure and return times by race and wealth, with strong social cohesion among evacuees from advantaged neighbourhoods in their destination choices. These empirical findings bring new insights into mobility and evacuations, providing policy recommendations for residents, decision-makers, and disaster managers alike.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Jun 15, 2021
Authors
Hengfang Deng, Daniel P. Aldrich, Michael M. Danziger, Jianxi Gao, Nolan E. Phillips, Sean P. Cornelius, Qi Ryan Wang
Tags
disaster evacuation
Hurricane Harvey
race and wealth
social inequalities
emergency planning
GPS data
evacuation patterns
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