2009
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-environ-082508-094348
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Environmental Justice

Abstract: The article reviews two decades of scholars' claims that exposures to pollution and other environmental risks are unequally distributed by race and class, examines case studies of environmental justice social movements and the history and politics of environmental justice policy making in the United States, and describes the emerging issue of global climate justice. The authors engage the contentious literature on how to quantitatively measure and document environmental injustice, especially the complex proble… Show more

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Cited by 1,073 publications
(637 citation statements)
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References 57 publications
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“…The well-established and important literature on environmental justice has primarily focused on the negative aspects and consequences of unequal/inequitable exposures to environmental hazards by race, socioeconomic status and so on (Kjellstrom et al, 2007;Mohai et al, 2009). However, our study and others (de Vries et al, 2003;Maas et al, 2006;Mitchell and Popham, 2008) indicate that access to 'good' environments may play a part in reducing health inequalities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The well-established and important literature on environmental justice has primarily focused on the negative aspects and consequences of unequal/inequitable exposures to environmental hazards by race, socioeconomic status and so on (Kjellstrom et al, 2007;Mohai et al, 2009). However, our study and others (de Vries et al, 2003;Maas et al, 2006;Mitchell and Popham, 2008) indicate that access to 'good' environments may play a part in reducing health inequalities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although environmental inequalities persisted historically (Taylor 1997;, environmental justice was not utilized as an organizing concept until the 1980s, when African American communities, black scholars, and the progressive United Church of Christ began to draw attention to environmental inequities experienced in black communities (Mohai, Pellow, and Roberts 2009;Szasz and Meuser 1997). Developing shortly after the civil rights movement, Everett Parker and Robert Bullard pursued environmental injustice narratives around civil rights and the experiences of African Americans in the southern United States, which were largely left out of mainstream environmental movements (generally white, male, wealthy; see Taylor 2000).…”
Section: Environmental Justice: Origins Conceptualizations and Advamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The movement marks the first environmental discourse framed by people of color (Agyeman et al 2016). The classic case of environmental racism that spurred this movement was North Carolina's decision to dump soil contaminated with polychlorinated biphenyl in Warren County where the largest proportion of African Americans in the state resided (Geiser and Waneck 1983;Mohai et al 2009). As this issue garnered national attention, EJ activism and research began to develop in tandem.…”
Section: Environmental Justice: Origins Conceptualizations and Advamentioning
confidence: 99%
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