The right to adequate housing in disaster relief efforts 2011, para. 14
Párrafo- Paragraph text
- When Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans in 2005, African Americans and poor people (with the two categories to a large extent blurred) bore the brunt of the devastation because, for the most part, they lived most often in the lower-lying, more flood-prone sections of the city. In addition large numbers of the metropolitan area's population (being generally poor) lacked the means to escape the flood. The particular impacts and costs of the hurricane were therefore intimately linked to pre existing social, economic and land use patterns, directly related to housing and urban planning policies.
- Condicón jurídica
- Non-negotiated soft law
- Organismo
- Special Rapporteur on adequate housing as a component of the right to an adequate standard of living
- Tipo de documento
- Special Procedures' report
- Medio de adopción
- N.A.
- Temas
- Environment
- Social & Cultural Rights
- Año
- 2011
- Tipo de párrafo
- Other
- Reference
- SR Housing, Report to the UNGA (2011), A/66/270, para. 14.
- Paragraph number
- 14
ordenados por
Fecha de adición
92 conexiones, 92 Entidades