Includes/Generic/Header_HomepageOnly.asp
Click logo for homepage of IMDiversity.com - where careers, opportunities and communities connect
home | search jobs | my account employer profiles | career center | about us | for employers
 
Featured Employer



 

Featured Jobs

View Featured Jobs

$100K-PLUS Jobs

One Year After Hurricane Katrina

Special All-Network Section from the IMDiversity.com Multicultural Villages, THE BLACK COLLEGIAN Magazine, and THE BLACK COLLEGIAN Online

 

News & Features

 

FEATURED COMMENTARIES
By Earl Ofari Hutchinson

Katrina Lessons, Pt. 1- Talk About Katrina Poverty Was Just That, Talk
One year after Katrina hit the Gulf Coast, the talk about a war on poverty turned out to be just that, talk. There’s no reason to think that will change, says the author.

Katrina's Lessons, Pt. 2 - Would FEMA Bungle Another Disaster?
A year after Hurricane Katrina, the writer looks at the changes made to the federal disaster-management agency, and whether they would make a difference today

Katrina's Lessons, Pt. 3 - Katrina Didn't Close the Racial Divide
The suffering Katrina unleashed might have been race neutral; it should have brought people together in an ongoing spirit of compassion and giving, not racial rancor and finger pointing

Health Problems Linger One Year After Katrina
Report by Melinda Smith, VoA News
Community health care along the U.S. Gulf Coast centers provided emergency treatment during and after the storm, but treatment is now being hindered by bureaucratic red tape and a shortage of medical personnel

'State of Perdition': S. American Laborers Describe Working in New Orleans
By Elizabeth Gonzalez, New America Media
Two workers rebuilding New Orleans describe the long hours and lack of job security of contract labor -- conditions familiar to one young California reporter

Dealing with the Effects of Trauma at Work
By Pauline Rennie Peyton, Organizational Consultant and Psychotherapist, Special to IMDiversity
There's much that managers must do when the unthinkable happens, including knowing when
outside intervention is needed

Who Will Be Hit Hardest by Climate Change?
By Julie Johnson, New American Media
Minority communities will be the first casualties of global warming, according to a new study

Tennessee State Students Teach Youngsters Affected by Katrina
By Eddie R. Cole, Black College Wire, @ THE BLACK COLLEGIAN Online
A not-so-ordinary summer camp, Camp Supercharge welcomed an average of 215 inner-city New Orleans children every weekday to Loyola University this month

After Dillard Graduation, Students Scatter Again
By Amber Wilson, Black College Wire
As of May, 32 of the new Dillard University graduates had been accepted to graduate schools, while 57 were going directly into the workplace and an undetermined number planned to enroll in professional schools, according to officials

Rebuilding Underway at Xavier University
THE BLACK COLLEGIAN Magazine, photos by Irving Johnson III
Interview with Warren Bell, Vice President, University and Media Relations, accompanied by 4-part photo series from the campus, which faces an estimated $35-40 million in repairs

 

Other Features

Spike Gets It Right in Levees, Says New Orleans Resident
By Randy Fertel, New America Media
Spike Lee's 4.5-hour documentary on New Orleans and Hurricane Katrina is mesmerizing. Just as important, the writer says, it's an evenhanded take on what went wrong, and a loving tribute to the city and its residents.

In Grad School After Culture Shock and A New City, a New Son
By Rebecca K. Roussell, Black College Wire
Excerpts from a "Where are they now?" series profiling new graduates who survived Hurricane Katrina, forthcoming in THE BLACK COLLEGIAN Magazine First Semester Issue

Anniversary Series

 
Anniversary Readings by the AP

A year after Katrina, Bush administration fulfills few promises to Gulf Coast

Looking for culprits at the scene of a crime named Katrina

Where's home? For Katrina's displaced, a million answers

Spike Lee marks anniversary with heartbreaking Katrina epic

What some Katrina survivors taught us through their faith

- MORE -

Of Interest from the Year's Archives

Do You Know What it Means to Lose New Orleans?
By Anne Rice
Commentary by noted novelist and daughter of New Orleans recalls the multicultural history of this unique city, and mourns the failure of the nation to come to its aid until too late.

From "After Katrina: Starting Over in New Orleans"
Multiple Contributors, THE BLACK COLLEGIAN Magazine

 

PHOTO ESSAY by Nikki Bannister


"Welcome to New Orleans"

From "Hurricane Katrina - Views from America's HBCUs"
Multiple Contributors, THE BLACK COLLEGIAN Magazine
 


 

 

Katrina Video Shows "No Tough Guy"
By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, The Hutchinson Report
Footage of a videoconference between President Bush and disaster officials a day before Hurricane Katrina lashed the Gulf Coast is smoking-gun proof of the president's poor leadership skills, the writer says

"Officials Are Blind to Abuse Heaped on Gulf Day Laborers"
By Cecilia Muñoz, National Council of La Raza, via New American Media
When I heard that the Governor of Louisiana told a Congressional Committee this week that she had no idea that immigrant workers who are rebuilding New Orleans are suffering abuse at the hands of employers, I couldn’t believe my ears.

 

Anniversary Readings from the AP

PART 1: Overview

PART 2: Economy

PART 3: Recovery & Rebuilding

PART 4: Diaspora

 

 

   
 

IMDiversity, Inc.
contact us
© 2008 IMDiversity Inc. All Rights Reserved.
privacy statement