Suicide is a leading cause of death across the five U.S. states along the Gulf Coast — Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas.
Galveston Island was used as an example to predict damage that would occur as a result of hurricanes of varying intensities.
College Station-based teams are behind a complex operation that monitors conditions and directs life-saving resources to affected areas in the Panhandle.
Insight from a Texas A&M urban planner.
In many communities, affordable housing returns slowly after a disaster, if at all, says a Texas A&M urban planning researcher.
Nonprofits play many pivotal roles before and after FEMA aid runs out, says the director of Texas A&M's Hazard Reduction and Recovery Center.
More than 750 students participated in the 14th Annual Disaster Day simulation to gain experience in emergency response.
A Texas A&M professor of urban planning explains how slow recovery for vulnerable households can slow the recovery of the entire community.
A Texas A&M study found Houston residents who experienced two or more hazardous events in the past five years had a reduction in mental health scores.
Recent Texas A&M research shows that emergency management often lacks inclusion of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.