Combined county-level drought incidence, damage, and census data

The threat of droughts and their associated impacts on the landscape and human communities have long been recognized in the United States, especially in high risk areas such as the southcentral region. This project examines whether existing drought indices can predict the occurrence of drought events and their actual damages, how the adaptive capacity (i.e., resilience) varies across space, and what public outreach and engagement effort would be most effective for mitigation of risk and impacts. The study region includes all 503 counties in Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. This data set was created to assess the community resilience to the drought hazards using the Resilience Inference Measurement (RIM) model. The data include county-level variables on drought hazards, damages, socioeconomic, and environmental variables for the time period 1991-2010.

Data and Resources

Field Value
accessLevel public
bureauCode {010:00}
catalog_@context https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.jsonld
catalog_conformsTo https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
catalog_describedBy https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.json
identifier b40fe9c8-3cc2-4e54-a75f-1b6af88205ea
metadata_type geospatial
modified 2016-11-07
old-spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-109.0513, 37.0015], [-89.0218, 37.0015], [-89.0218, 25.8456], [-109.0513, 25.8456], [-109.0513, 37.0015]]]}
publisher Climate Adaptation Science Centers
resource-type Dataset
source_datajson_identifier true
source_hash 3791b72ab49642d1df5d3cc8a06b02064d27f9f7
source_schema_version 1.1
spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-109.0513, 37.0015], [-89.0218, 37.0015], [-89.0218, 25.8456], [-109.0513, 25.8456], [-109.0513, 37.0015]]]}
theme {geospatial}
Groups
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tags
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • arkansas
  • ckan
  • climatological-hazard
  • community-resilience
  • drought
  • geo
  • geoss
  • louisiana
  • national
  • new-mexico
  • north-america
  • oklahoma
  • resilience-inference-measurement-rim-model
  • texas
  • united-states
isopen False
license_id notspecified
license_title License not specified
maintainer Department of Environmental Sciences (Point of Contact)
maintainer_email nlam@lsu.edu
metadata_created 2025-11-19T17:44:35.249399
metadata_modified 2025-11-19T17:44:35.249405
notes The threat of droughts and their associated impacts on the landscape and human communities have long been recognized in the United States, especially in high risk areas such as the southcentral region. This project examines whether existing drought indices can predict the occurrence of drought events and their actual damages, how the adaptive capacity (i.e., resilience) varies across space, and what public outreach and engagement effort would be most effective for mitigation of risk and impacts. The study region includes all 503 counties in Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. This data set was created to assess the community resilience to the drought hazards using the Resilience Inference Measurement (RIM) model. The data include county-level variables on drought hazards, damages, socioeconomic, and environmental variables for the time period 1991-2010.
num_resources 2
num_tags 17
title Combined county-level drought incidence, damage, and census data