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The book 'Travesty in Haiti' noted in an e-mail to this list by Louis is, 
indeed, a highly recommended book. It is the author Tim Schwartz' observations 
and analysis of the aid industry in Haiti based on his many years of research 
and writing in the country. It was published in 2008, ie before the 2010 
earthquake.

The author found himself at the center of a storm of controversy in 
early-to-mid 2011 over a study commissioned by USAID which he was hired to 
direct. The study was never published by USAID. It was commissioned to study 
the effectiveness of rubble removal and other post-2010 earthquake projects 
funded by USAID. The study found that the rubble programs were, indeed, 
effective. The controversy stemmed from an offshoot of the research team's 
work. Because they conducted detailed neighbourhood surveys throughout the 
earthquake zone in Port au Prince, they were able to report in the final report 
that the estimate of deaths from the earthquake had been greatly exaggerated by 
all the governments and aid agencies involved. "Official" estimates ranged from 
200,000 people to over 300,000 people who died. The Building Assessment and 
Rubble Removal (BARR) study placed the number at 40,000 to 70,000. The reason 
they were able to quantify the figure was that they studdied rubble removal 
effectiveness in neighbourhoods and part of their work was to survey residents. 
Among the questions that asked was, "Who lived here before the earthquake, and 
where are they now?" This study was THE ONLY SCIENTIFIC SURVEY OF EARTHQUAKE 
DEATHS conducted in Haiti. 

Read the 2011 BARR study here. Read some of the controversy it provoked here.

Unfortunately, Tim Schwartz, who resides in Haiti and was there at the time of 
the 2010 earthquake, did not write a promised book on the quake and the aid 
industry response. In my opinion, a comprehensive book on the subject has yet 
to be written. Those books on the subject which are listed in the Canada Haiti 
Action Network list of recommended books are each partial. The most-publicized 
of the post-earthquake books, Jonathan Katz' 'The Big Truck That Went By', is 
very partial and far from the best, principally because he studiously avoids 
any analysis of the ongoing imperialist occupation of Haiti and how this made 
Haiti so vulnerable to the earthquake in the first place.

The best books are Beverly Bell's 'Fault Lines' and Mark Schuler's 'Tectonic 
Shifts'. Laurent Dubois' 'Haiti: The Aftershocks of History' is very good for 
historically situating Haiti's perilous condition at the time of the 
earthquake, but unfortunately he soft pedals the impact of the harsh, nearly 
30-year imperialist intervention in Haiti that has destabilized and weakened 
the country ever since the overthrow of the Duvalier tyranny in 1986. (Dubois 
is the author of the masterful history of Haiti's 1791-1804 anti-slavery 
rebellion and independence struggle, 'Avengers of the New World'.)

The best essays on the social and political context of the earthquake disaster 
are co-authored by yours truly: 
Haiti’s humanitarian crisis: Rooted in history of military coups and 
occupations, May 2011
and, Haiti's promised rebuilding unrealized as Haitians challenge authoritarian 
rule, January 2015

Roger Annis
March 10, 2015                                    
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