“…Put simply, distribution justice is the geographical equality of locations regarding the environmental “thing” relative to the people who are impacted by it. This particular form of environmental justice has been exceedingly common in research (Karasov et al, 2022; Liu, Shen, et al, 2021; Reeder et al, 2022; Walker et al, 2021; Xu et al, 2019), with researchers studying distribution topics ranging from environmental harms such as polluting enterprises (Liu, Shen, et al, 2021) or vulnerability to flooding (Chakraborty et al, 2020), to environmental benefits like urban green spaces (Liu, Kwan, & Kan, 2021) or beach access (Montgomery et al, 2015). This is the same type of injustice that sparked the initial movement itself, with the establishment of a hazardous waste landfill in geographic proximity to a Community of Color in Warren County, North Carolina in 1982 (Tzoumis, 1992).…”