Reforming New Orleans: The Contentious Politics of Change in the Big Easy

Reforming New Orleans: The Contentious Politics of Change in the Big Easy

Reforming New Orleans: The Contentious Politics of Change in the Big Easy

Reforming New Orleans: The Contentious Politics of Change in the Big Easy

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Overview

Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans in 2005, but in the subsequent ten years, the city has demonstrated both remarkable resilience and frustrating stagnation. In Reforming New Orleans, Peter F. Burns and Matthew O. Thomas chart the city’s recovery and assess how successfully officials at the local, state, and federal levels transformed the Big Easy in the wake of disaster. Focusing on reforms in four key sectors of urban governance—economic development, education, housing, and law enforcement—both before and after Katrina, they find lessons for cities hit by sudden shocks, such as natural disasters or large-scale financial crises.

One of their key insights is that post-disaster recovery tends to limit local control. State and federal officials, national foundations, and local actors excluded by pre-Katrina politics used their resources and authority to displace entrenched local interests and implement a public agenda focused on institutional and governmental change. Burns and Thomas also make clear reform in New Orleans was already underway before Katrina hit, but that it had focused largely on upper- and middle-class residents, a trend that accelerated after the storm. The market-centered nature of the reforms have ensured that they largely benefited city and regional elites while not significantly aiding the city’s working-class and impoverished populations. Thus reform has come at a cost and that cost, in the long term, could undermine the political gains of the post-Katrina era.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501700446
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 12/18/2015
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.80(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Peter F. Burns is Professor of Political Science at Soka University of America and was previously Professor and Chair of the Department of Political Science at Loyola University New Orleans. He is the author most recently of Electoral Politics Is Not Enough: Racial and Ethnic Minorities and Urban Politics. Matthew O. Thomas is Professor of Political Science at California State University, Chico.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Rebuilding Governance, Politics, and Policy in New Orleans 1. Pre-Katrina New Orleans 2. Reform and Economic Development 3. Democracy versus Reform in Pre-Katrina Education 4. The Most Reform-Friendly City in the Country 5. From Mismanagement to Reform in Housing 6. Public Safety or an Unsafe Public? Conclusion: The Effects of Sudden Shocks on Governance, Politics, and Policy

What People are Saying About This

Marion Orr

In Reforming New Orleans, Peter F. Burns and Matthew O. Thomas open for full view what many paid very little attention to before August 2005: New Orleans has long been a poor, dangerous, racially divided, and struggling city. Burns and Thomas provide a rich description of policy implementation in New Orleans before and after the storm and of what happened to education, public housing, and public safety after Katrina. This book breaks new ground.

Susan E. Clarke

'New Orleans was different after Hurricane Katrina, but it was not new.' With this thoughtful observation, Peter F. Burns and Matthew O. Thomas assess dramatic changes in post-Katrina New Orleans' politics and policies in the context of prior political arrangements. The disarray unleashed by Katrina encouraged collaboration between a newly active business sector and civic elite on reform proposals that wrested authority from local actors and diminished local voices. Burns and Thomas trace the effects of this extralocal reform narrative on housing, economic development, public education, and the police. Reforming New Orleans features wonderful detail on The Big Easy and the politics of reform.

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