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Investigating the effect of oil spills
on the environment and public health.
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Funding Source: Year One Block Grant - Louisiana State University

Project Publications & Presentations

Tracking Community Resilience in the Wake of the Deepwater Horizon Disaster: Assessing the Evidence

Journal Articles - 5

2018

Parks, V., Drakeford, L., Cope, M. R., & Slack, T. (2018). Disruption of Routine Behaviors Following the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill. Society & Natural Resources, 31(3), 277-290.

2017

Cope, M. R., & Slack, T. (2017). Emplaced social vulnerability to technological disasters: Southeast Louisiana and the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Population and Environment, 38(3), 217-241.

2016

Cope, M. R., Slack, T., Blanchard, T. C., & Lee, M. R. (2016). It's Not Whether You Win or Lose, It's How You Place the Blame: Shifting Perceptions of Recreancy in the Context of the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill. Rural Sociology, 81(3), 295-315.

2013

Cope, M. R., Slack, T., Blanchard, T. C., & Lee, M. R. (2013). Does time heal all wounds? Community attachment, natural resource employment, and health impacts in the wake of the BP Deepwater Horizon disaster. Social Science Research, 42(3), 872-881.

2012

Lee, M. R., & Blanchard, T. C. (2012). Community Attachment and Negative Affective States in the Context of the BP <i>Deepwater Horizon</i> Disaster. American Behavioral Scientist, 56(1), 24-47.
This research was made possible by a grant from The Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative.
www.gulfresearchinitiative.org