“…The NEJA tour, while not its' explicit mission, attempted to expand the boundaries of environmental justice and reinforce two overlapping politics that continue to inform contemporary environmental justice activism: the anti-toxics movement and the movement against environmental racism (Schlosberg 2007, 46). Several studies have exposed this boundary-breaking and overlapping tendency of environmental justice action (Brown 2007;Brown, et al 2004;Adamson, Evans, and Stein 2002;Ageyman, Bullard, and Evans 2003;Bryant 1995;Bullard 1993Bullard , 2005Cole and Foster 2001;Epstein 1997;Faber 1998;Hofrichter 1993;Pellow and Brulle 2005;Roberts and Toffolon-Weiss 2001;Stein 2004), the intersection of neoliberalism and environmental justice (Holifield 2004), and the ''scaler politics'' of environmental justice (Kurtz 2003;Bickerstaff and Agyeman 2009;Cox 1998;Sziarto and Leitner 2010;Davies 2006;Agyeman and Evans 2004). Despite some recent efforts (Checker 2005;Allen 2003; Checker, this issue), there is a need for greater ethnographic description illustrating the complexities of intra-activist relations in general and peoples' engagements in and experiences with the micropolitics of environmental justice alliance building in particular.…”