• Donate
  • DEMOCRACY
    • Immigration
    • Taxes
    • Who Counts?
  • LABOR
    • Cheated at work
  • HEALTH
    • Mental Health Parity
  • HOUSING
    • Housing in crisis
    • Harm’s Way
  • EDUCATION
    • Unhoused and Undercounted
    • Criminalizing kids
  • ENVIRONMENT
    • Harm’s Way
  • About Us
    • Our staff
    • Our donors
    • Contact us
  • Newsletters
    • Sign up
    • Watchdog
  • Podcasts
    • Integrity Out Loud
    • The Heist
      • Season 1
      • Season 2
  • Data Tools
    • The Accountability Project (TAP)
    • Copy, Paste, Legislate
  • Archive
  • Facebook Page
  • Twitter
  • Linkedin
  • Instagram
  • DEMOCRACY
    • Immigration
    • Taxes
    • Who Counts?
  • LABOR
    • Cheated at work
  • HEALTH
    • Mental Health Parity
  • HOUSING
    • Housing in crisis
    • Harm’s Way
  • EDUCATION
    • Unhoused and Undercounted
    • Criminalizing kids
  • ENVIRONMENT
    • Harm’s Way
Skip to content
  • About Us
    • Our staff
    • Our donors
    • Contact us
  • Newsletters
    • Sign up
    • Watchdog
  • Podcasts
    • Integrity Out Loud
    • The Heist
      • Season 1
      • Season 2
  • Data Tools
    • The Accountability Project (TAP)
    • Copy, Paste, Legislate
  • Archive
  • Facebook Page
  • Twitter
  • Linkedin
  • Instagram
Center for Public Integrity

Center for Public Integrity

Investigating inequality

  • DEMOCRACY
    • Immigration
    • Taxes
    • Who Counts?
  • LABOR
    • Cheated at work
  • HEALTH
    • Mental Health Parity
  • HOUSING
    • Housing in crisis
    • Harm’s Way
  • EDUCATION
    • Unhoused and Undercounted
    • Criminalizing kids
  • ENVIRONMENT
    • Harm’s Way
  • Donate
Donate

Category: Harm’s Way

The federal government knows that millions of Americans will need to move to avoid the most punishing impacts of climate change, but the country offers little organized assistance for such relocation. When communities ask the government for help, they face steep barriers — a particular problem for communities of color.

Logo with a house underwater.
Posted inHarm's Way

Join us for a live discussion: Harm’s Way

Avatar photo by Charlie Hsing-Chuan Dodge September 29, 2022October 24, 2022

UPDATE: Watch the replay of the panel discussion below. Join us for a live conversation Monday, Oct. 3, at 10 am EDT with the journalists behind Harm’s Way, a project focusing on the impact of climate-driven disasters in vulnerable communities. This investigation explored how prepared the U.S. government is to help relocate communities from heavily […]

A view of the Pecatonica River. On both sides there are buildings near the river's edge.
Posted inHarm's Way

When climate change makes home unsafe

by Alex Lubben August 19, 2022August 17, 2022
Posted inHarm's Way

Reporting on residents in harm’s way

Avatar photo by Mc Nelly Torres August 18, 2022August 18, 2022
Posted inHarm's Way

Leaving the island: The messy, contentious reality of climate relocation

by Olga Loginova and Zak Cassel August 17, 2022November 4, 2022
Posted inHarm's Way

Hear from those leaving a beloved, disaster-threatened home

by Olga Loginova August 17, 2022August 15, 2022
A New Bern sign is almost entirely submerged under water after he storm surge from Hurricane Florence.
Posted inHarm's Way

Too little, too late for people seeking climate relief

Avatar photo by Mc Nelly Torres, Alex Lubben and Zak Cassel August 10, 2022March 13, 2023
Logo with a house underwater.
Posted inHarm's Way

On the ground: Reporting from the front lines of a climate relocation crisis

by The Center for Public Integrity August 4, 2022November 9, 2022
Betty Rick, a middle-aged Black woman, sits on a sofa looking distraught. She has an envelope in her hands and a mask under her chin.
Posted inHarm's Way

Trapped in harm’s way as climate disasters mount

by Alex Lubben, Julia Shipley, Zak Cassel and Olga Loginova August 3, 2022November 4, 2022
Posted inHarm's Way

Atrapados en la zona de peligro: sin ayuda para reubicarse, una catástrofe tras otra

by Alex Lubben, Julia Shipley, Zak Cassel and Olga Loginova August 3, 2022November 4, 2022
Someone walk through the rubble of a fire in a forest. Burned tables and chairs are seen thrown about in the scene. Trees are burned, too.
Posted inHarm's Way

How we found communities in harm’s way

by Alex Lubben and Zak Cassel August 3, 2022August 2, 2022
A magnifying glass on a white background.
Posted inHarm's Way

Floods, hurricanes, wildfires: What aid is your county getting to prepare?

by The Center for Public Integrity August 3, 2022August 3, 2022

WHO WE ARE

The Center for Public Integrity is a nonprofit investigative news organization focused on inequality in the U.S. We do not accept advertising or charge people to read our work.

DONATE TODAY

Search


DEEP DIVES DELIVERED

Get a weekly dive into inequality in America with our Watchdog newsletter delivered to your inbox.

Newsletter Sign-Up: Watchdog

Use the unsubscribe link in the emails we send to opt out at any time.


SUPPORT US

Your contribution is appreciated.

latest Stories

Lead keeps poisoning children. It doesn’t have to.

Lead keeps poisoning children. It doesn’t have to.

Eight ways to take action on lead contaminating your community’s soil 

Eight ways to take action on lead contaminating your community’s soil 

El plomo sigue envenenando a los niños. No tiene que ser así.

El plomo sigue envenenando a los niños. No tiene que ser así.

Ocho medidas que puedes tomar cuando el plomo contamina los suelos de tu comunidad

Ocho medidas que puedes tomar cuando el plomo contamina los suelos de tu comunidad

Center for Public Integrity
  • Facebook Page
  • Twitter
  • Linkedin
  • Instagram
  • About Us
  • Sign up for our newsletter
  • Board of Directors
  • Archive
  • Contact Us
  • Public Integrity documents
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram

Investigating the systems and circumstances that contribute to inequality.

Support Us
© 2023 Center for Public Integrity. Proudly powered by Newspack by Automattic Privacy Policy and Terms of Use