
RSVP at https://centropr.nationbuilder.com/webinar_post_disaster_recovery
Puerto Rico has suffered the
compounded effects of multiple disasters since the devastating impacts of
Hurricanes Irma and Maria in September 2017. At the end of 2019, the island
was impacted with recurrent seismic activity in the southwest region,
including a magnitude 6.4 earthquake on January 7, 2020. In early 2020, the current
COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting health crises induced yet another
economic contraction. All these disasters are underscored by a crushing debt
crisis and a federally mandated austerity regime since 2016. Multiple natural
disasters have exacerbated vulnerability and poverty; and public energy,
telecommunications, water, health, and transportation systems have
deteriorated and become even more vulnerable, causing systematic failures in
social safety nets.
Post-disaster federal funding for
economic recovery offers Puerto Rico a unique window of opportunity to
restore its economy and infrastructure in a more resilient fashion while
strengthening the nonprofit sector capacity for community planning, housing
development and neighborhood revitalization. However, such an opportunity is contingent
on implementing a comprehensive strategy for reforming public policy to
encourage and support nonprofit developers participation in reconstruction
programs, building industry capacity by strengthening intermediaries and
CDCs, encouraging intra-industry partnerships and collaborations, and
providing professional development for economic recovery.
Join us Wednesday, February 3rd at
3:00 PM EST/4:00 AST for a webinar to discuss the collection of studies
included in Fall 2020 special volume of the Centro Journal showing evidence
of how post disaster recovery is progressing in Puerto Rico, and the
challenges and opportunities for local participation in reconstruction programs.
Presenters:
Entrepreneurial
Dynamics in Puerto Rico Before and After Hurricane María
Marinés Aponte, Professor, Business Administration Department at, Universidad
de Puerto Rico, Recinto de Río Piedras
Community
Development Corporations and Reconstruction Policy in Puerto Rico
Ramón Borges-Méndez, Associate Professor of Community Development, Department
of International Development, Community, and Environment, Clark University
Impact
of Hurricane María to the Civic Sector: A Profile of Non-Profits in Puerto
Rico
Ivis García Zambrana, Assistant Professor, City & Metropolitan Planning,
University of Utah
Puerto
Rico Community Development Industry’s Capacity for Disaster Recovery
Edwin Meléndez, Director of the Center for Puerto Rican Studies and Professor
of Urban Policy and Planning, Hunter College
What
is Possible? Policy Options for Long-term Disaster Recovery in Puerto Rico
Ariam L. Torres Cordero, Centro Researcher and doctoral student in Urban
Planning (DSUP) at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Presenter bios can be found at this
link: https://centropr.hunter.cuny.edu/education/instructores
CENTRO:
Journal Special Issue: Post-Disaster Recovery in Puerto Rico
and Local Participation is available here http://www.centropr-store.com/centro-journal-vol-xxxii-no-3-fall-2020/
Center for Puerto Rican Studies
http://centropr.nationbuilder.com/
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