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Professor and Student Help Research Mobile Home Resilience in Maine

Eileen Johnson and Harry Cooper portraits

Senior Lecturer in Environmental Studies and Program Manager Eileen Johnson and Harry Cooper ’22

Johnson and Cooper are contributing to the analysis focused on Maine. Their work falls within the purview of the CoLaboratory for Environmental Social Science Research (CoLab), part of the Bowdoin Environmental Studies program. CoLab students and faculty pursue research through the lens of how environmental changes and policies impact people.

In that vein, Johnson and Cooper will not just be mapping mobile homes and flood plains, they will also join the research team in organizing meetings with residents of mobile homes and other stakeholders.

“The most important thing is reaching out and finding out what the people need in these communities,” Johnson said. “Starting with asking what are your concerns, what are the needs you see that you and your community have. It could be that we find that few parks are at risk for flooding, and instead we focus on heating and cooling.”

Environmental studies and economics major Harry Cooper ’22 was hired by Birkel and Johnson through the academic year to gather data on the number of mobile home parks in Maine (approximately 300, he’s found) and to site their locations on federal flood maps.

Cooper will also be researching the demographic data of mobile home residents, who tend to be older and less financially secure. He said studies like these, which focus on more vulnerable populations, are critical.

While he said he enjoys the intellectual challenge of projects that involve geospatial analysis, he also appreciates that they “provide a service to people who are working and living their lives.”

The researchers expect to conclude their study in August.