Available Formats
Renew Orleans: Globalized Development and Worker Resistance after Katrina
By (Author) Aaron Schneider
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
1st June 2018
United States
General
Non Fiction
Urban communities
Social impact of disasters / accidents (natural or man-made)
307.34160976
Paperback
264
Width 140mm, Height 216mm, Spine 38mm
Through interviews and surveys, Aaron Schneider contrasts city sectors prioritized during post-Katrina recovery with neglected sectors. The result is a fine-grained view of the way labor markets are structured to the advantage of elites, emphasizing how dual development produces wealth for the few while distributing poverty and exclusion to the many on the basis of race, gender, and ethnicity.
"Aaron Schneider provides a compellingand heretofore untoldstory of how power and poverty in New Orleans were restructured after Hurricane Katrina. A must-read, Renew Orleans is an epic account of how a globally-oriented elite secured political power amidst the chaos, attempted to rebuild the city in their image, and met fierce resistance by working people."Steve Striffler, coeditor of Working in the Big Easy: The History and Politics of Labor in New Orleans
"Aaron Schneider makes a unique contribution in situating New Orleans's political development, both pre- and post-Katrina, in relation to the city's evolving political economy. One of the book's distinctive contributions is that it connects the racial and cultural discourses through which local politics has been articulated to that evolving political economy and competition among governing elites. His analysis is deep, rich, and concrete; it makes an important intervention in the urban politics and political economy field and should be a touchstone for all subsequent scholarship on New Orleans."Adolph Reed, Jr., University of Pennsylvania
"Aaron Schneiders Renew Orleans gives us an unprecedented account of labor conditions in post-Katrina New Orleans and a critical examination of elite power in the city. Drawing on a wealth of quantitative and historical material, Schneider captures the experiences of the Crescent Citys laboring classes, whose plight has too often been neglected in popular celebrations of recovery. Renew Orleans tells the story of those who are fighting for a more just New Orleans through unionization, community struggles, and sector-wide models of worker organizing."Cedric Johnson, author of The Neoliberal Deluge: Hurricane Katrina, Late Capitalism, and the Remaking of New Orleans
Aaron Schneider is Leo Block Chair and associate professor in the Josef Korbel School of International Relations at the University of Denver. He is author of State-Building and Tax Regimes in Central America.