BakerE. J. (1991). Hurricane evacuation behavior. International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters, 9, 287‐310.
3.
BirklandT. A. (1997). After disaster: Agenda setting, public policy, and focusing events. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press.
4.
CooperC.BlockR. (2006). Disaster: Hurricane Katrina and the failure of Homeland Security. New York: Times Books.
5.
DahlE. J. (2008). Preventing terrorist attacks: Intelligence warning and policy response. PhD thesis, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, Somerville, MA.
6.
Department of Homeland Security. (2004). Catastrophic incident annex in National Response Plan, Draft 7. Washington, DC: Author.
FEMA. (2006). 99 Percent of Wisconsin residents don’t have flood insurance. Washington, DC: Author.
9.
FreudenburgW. R.GramlingR.LaskaS.EriksonK. (2008). Organizing hazards, engineering disasters: Improving the recognition of political‐economic factors in the creation of disasters. Social Forces, 87, 1015‐1038.
10.
FlynnS. E.PrietoD. B. (2006). Neglected defense. New York: Council on Foreign Relations.
11.
GerberB. J. (2006). Disaster management in the United States: Examining key political and policy challenges. Policy Studies Journal, 35, 236‐237.
12.
Insurance Information Institute. (2006). Hurricane season of 2006: Impacts on US P/C instance markets in 2006 & beyond. New York: Author.
13.
LarzelereA. (1988). The 1980 Cuban boatlift. Washington, DC: National Defense University Press.
14.
MeyerR. (2006). Why we under‐prepare for hazards. In DanielsR. J.KettlD. F.KunreutherH. (Eds.), On risk and disaster: Lessons from Hurricane Katrina (pp. 153‐174). Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
15.
MoynihanD. P. (2008). Learning under Uncertainty: Networks in Crisis Management. Public Administration Review, 68, 350‐361.
16.
National Research Council. (2006). Facing hazards and disasters: Understanding human dimensions. Washington, DC: National Academies Press.
17.
PaulisonD. (2006, November30). FEMA Director Paulison delivers remarks at National Press Club. CQ Transcripts, p. 4.
18.
RobertsP. (2006). FEMA and the prospects for reputation‐based autonomy. Studies in American Political Development, 20, 57‐87.
19.
RuchC.SchumannG. (1997). Corpus Christi Study Area hurricane contingency planning guide. Hazard Reduction and Recovery Center, Texas A&M University.
20.
SchroederA. D.WamsleyG. L. (1996). Escalating in a quagmire: The changing dynamics of the emergency management policy subsystem. Public Administration Review, 56, 235‐244.
21.
SmithG. (2006, July). Recovery after Hurricane Katrina. Paper presented at the Natural Hazards Center Workshop, Boulder, CO.
22.
SmithG. (2008, July). [Untitled presentation]. Paper presented at the Natural Hazards Center Annual Workshop, Broomfield, CO.
23.
TierneyK. (2006). Social dimensions of catastrophic disasters [public lecture]. Stanford University, CA.
24.
U.S. House of RepresentativesSelect Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Katrina. (2006). A failure of initiative. Washington, DC: Author.
25.
U.S. Senate Committee of Homeland Security and Government Affairs. (2006). Hurricane Katrina: A nation still unprepared. Washington, DC: Author.
26.
White House. (2006). The federal response to Hurricane Katrina: Lessons learned. Washington, DC: Author.