Jump to content

Environmental justice

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Environmental justice is a social movement that addresses injustice that occurs when poor or marginalized communities are harmed by hazardous waste, resource extraction, and other land uses from which they do not benefit.[1][2] The movement has generated hundreds of studies showing that exposure to environmental harm is inequitably distributed.[3]

The movement began in the United States in the 1980s. It was heavily influenced by the American civil rights movement and focused on environmental racism within rich countries. The movement was later expanded to consider gender, international environmental injustice, and inequalities within marginalized groups. As the movement achieved some success in rich countries, environmental burdens were shifted to the Global South (as for example through extractivism or the global waste trade). The movement for environmental justice has thus become more global, with some of its aims now being articulated by the United Nations. The movement overlaps with movements for Indigenous land rights and for the human right to a healthy environment.[4]

Cleaning environment

The goal of the environmental justice movement is to achieve agency for marginalized communities in making environmental decisions that affect their lives. The global environmental justice movement arises from local environmental conflicts in which environmental defenders frequently confront multi-national corporations in resource extraction or other industries. Local outcomes of these conflicts are increasingly influenced by trans-national environmental justice networks.[5][6]

Environmental justice scholars have produced a large interdisciplinary body of social science literature that includes contributions to political ecology, environmental law, and theories on justice and sustainability.[2][7][8]

Definitions

[edit]
Low-income workers in Ghana recycling waste from high-income countries, with recycling conditions heavily polluting the Agbogbloshie area

The United States Environmental Protection Agency defines environmental justice as:[9]

the fair treatment and meaningful involvement of all people regardless of race, color, national origin, or income with respect to the development, implementation, and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations and policies. Fair treatment means that no group of people, including racial, ethnic, or socio-economic groups, should bear a disproportionate share of the negative environmental consequences resulting from industrial, municipal, and commercial operations or the execution of federal, state, local, and tribal programs and policies

Environmental justice is also discussed as environmental racism or environmental inequality.[10]

Environmental justice is typically defined as distributive justice, which is the equitable distribution of environmental risks and benefits.[11] Some definitions address procedural justice, which is the fair and meaningful participation in decision-making. Other scholars emphasise recognition justice, which is the recognition of oppression and difference in environmental justice communities. People's capacity to convert social goods into a flourishing community is a further criteria for a just society.[2][11][12] However, initiatives have been taken to expand the notion of environmental justice beyond the three pillars of distribution, participation, and recognition to also include the dimensions of self-governing authority, relational ontologies, and epistemic justice.[13]

Robert D. Bullard writes that environmental justice, as a social movement and ideological stewardship, may instead be seen as a conversation of equity. Bullard writes that equity is distilled into three board categories: procedural, geographic, and social.[1] From his publication “Confronting Environmental Racism in the Twenty-First Century,” he draws our the difference between the three within the context of environmental injustices:

Procedural equity refers to the “fairness” question: the extent that rules, regulations, evaluation criteria and enforcement are applied uniformly across the board and in a non-discriminatory way. Unequal protection might result from nonscientific and undemocratic decisions, exclusionary practices, public hearings held in remote locations and at inconvenient times, and use of English-only material as the language in which to communicate and conduct hearings for non-English-speaking publics.

Geographic equity refers to the location and spatial configuration of communities and their proximity to environmental hazards, noxious facilities and locally unwanted land uses (Lulus) such as landfills, incinerators, sewage treatment plants, lead smelters, refineries and other noxious facilities. For example, unequal protection may result from land-use decisions that determine the location of residential amenities and disamenities. The poor and communities of colour often suffer a “triple” vulnerability of noxious facility siting, as do the unincorporated—sparsely populated communities that are not legally chartered as cities or municipalities and are therefore usually governed by distant county governments rather than having their own locally elected officials.

Social equity assesses the role of sociological factors (race, ethnicity, class, culture, life styles, political power, etc.) on environmental decision making. Poor people and people of colour often work in the most dangerous jobs and live in the most polluted neighbourhoods, their children exposed to all kinds of environmental toxins in the playgrounds and in their homes.

Indigenous environmental justice

[edit]

In non-Native communities, where toxic industries and other discriminatory practices are disproportionately occurring, residents rely on laws and statutory frameworks outlined by the EPA. They rely on distributive justice, centered around the nature of private property. Native Americans do not fall under the same statutory frameworks as they are citizens of Indigenous nations, not ethnic minorities. As individuals, they are subject to American laws. As nations, they are subject to a separate legal regime, constructed on the basis of pre-existing sovereignty acknowledged by treaty and the U.S. Constitution. Environmental justice to Indigenous persons is not understood by legal entities but rather their distinct cultural and religious doctrines.[14]

Environmental Justice for Indigenous peoples follows a model that frames issues in terms of their colonial condition and can affirm decolonization as a potential framework within environmental justice.[15] While Indigenous peoples’ lived experiences vary from place to place, David Pellow writes that there are “common realities they all share in their experience of colonization that make it possible to generalize an Indigenous methodology while recognizing specific, localized conditions”.[15] Even abstract ideas like the right to a clean environment, a human right according to the United Nations,[16] contradicts Indigenous peoples understanding of environmental justice as it reflects the commodification of land when seen in light of property values.[14]

Environmentalism of the poor

[edit]

Joan Martinez-Alier's influential concept of the environmentalism of the poor highlights the ways in which marginalized communities, particularly those in the Global South, are disproportionately affected by environmental degradation and the importance of including their perspectives and needs in environmental decision-making. Martinez-Alier's work also introduces the concept of "ecological distribution conflicts," which are conflicts over access to and control of natural resources and the environmental impacts that result from their use, and which are often rooted in social and economic inequalities.[4]

Slow violence

[edit]

The violence wrought by climate change, toxic drift, deforestation, oil spills, and the environmental aftermath of war can be characterized as slow violence. The term “slow violence” was coined by author Rob Nixon in his 2011 book Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor.[17] Slow violence is defined as “violence that occurs gradually and out of sight, a violence of delayed destruction that is dispersed across time and space, an attritional violence that is typically not viewed as violence at all”.[17] Environmental justice as a social movement addresses environmental issues that may be defined as slow violence and otherwise may not be addressed by legislative bodies. Slow violence exacerbates the vulnerability of ecosystems and of people who are poor, disempowered, and often involuntarily displaced, while fueling social conflicts that arise from desperation.[17]

Critical environmental justice

[edit]

Drawing on concepts of anarchism, posthumanism, critical theory,[18] and intersectional feminism, author David Naguib Pellow created the concept of Critical Environmental Justice (CEJ) in his work What is Critical Environmental Justice.[19] Critical EJ is a perspective intended to address a number of limitations and tensions within EJ Studies. Critical EJ calls for scholarship that builds on research in environmental justice studies by questioning assumptions and gaps in earlier work in the field, embracing greater interdisciplinary, and moving towards methodologies and epistemologies including and beyond the social sciences.[20] Critical EJ scholars believe that since multiple forms of inequality drive and characterize the experience of environmental injustice, the EJ field would benefit from expanding in that direction.[21]

Differentiation between conventional environmental studies and Critical EJ studies is done through four distinctive "pillars". These include, in David Pellow’s writing: (1) questions concerning the degree to which scholars should place emphasis on one or more social categories of difference (e.g., race, class, gender, sexuality, species, etc.) versus a focus on multiple forms of inequality; (2) the extent to which scholars studying EJ issues should focus on single-scale versus multi-scalar analyses of the causes, consequences, and possible resolutions of EJ struggles; (3) the degree to which various forms of social inequality and power—including state power—are viewed as entrenched and embedded in society; and (4) the largely unexamined question of the expendability of human and non-human populations facing socioecological threats from states, industries, and other political economic forces.[21]

In his 2017 publication What is Critical Environmental Justice, David Pellow writes as an example of the four pillars working in-tandem:[20]

Where we find rivers dammed for hydropower plants we also tend to find indigenous peoples and fisherfolk, as well as other working people, whose livelihoods and health are harmed as a result; when sea life suffers from exposure to toxins such as mercury, we find that human beings also endure the effects of mercury when they consume those animals; and the intersecting character of multiple forms of inequality is revealed when nuclear radiation or climate change affects all species and humans across all social class levels, racial/ethnic groups, genders, abilities, and ages.

David Pellow applies his concept of Critical EJ towards modern-day movements in his publication Toward A Critical Environmental Justice Studies, in which he applied the aforementioned pillars towards the Black Lives Matter movement and the problem of state violence.[21] Pellow argues that within conventional studies, “the Black Lives Matter movement and the struggle against environmental racism … is a connection that many scholars might not make at first glance because police brutality and environmental politics would appear to be only tangentially related.”[21] Following his four pillars of Critical EJ, his ties the concept to the Black Lives Matter movement and associated movements, demonstrating:[21]

(1) how attention to multiple categories of difference and inequality (including more-than-human species and the built environment); (2) an emphasis on the role of scale as a way of understanding the violence of racism and the promise of resistance movements; (3) a focus on linking the entrenched character of social inequalities with transformative, anti-authoritarian and anarchist perspectives; (4) and an application of the concepts of racial and socioecological indispensability can produce an enriched account of that movement’s core concerns, its limitations, and its possibilities.

First Pillar: Intersectionality

[edit]

The first pillar of Critical EJ Studies involves the recognition that social inequality and oppression in all forms intersect, and that actors in the more-than-human world are subjects of oppression and frequently agents of social change.[20] Developed by Kimberlé Crenshaw in 1989, intersectionality theory states that individuals exist in a crossroads of all their identities, with privilege and marginalization in the intersection between their class, race, gender, sexuality, queerness, cis- or transness, ethnicity, ability, and other facts of identity.[22][23] As David Nibert and Michael Fox put it in the context of injustice, “The oppression of various devalued groups in human societies is not independent and unrelated; rather, the arrangements that lead to various forms of oppression are integrated in such a way that the exploitation of one group frequently augments and compounds the mistreatment of others.” Thus, Critical EJ views racism, heteropatriarchy, classism ,nativism, ableism, ageism, speciesism (the belief that one species is superior to another), and other forms of inequality as intersecting axes of domination and control.[20]

The organization Intersectional Environmentalism, founded by Leah Thomas in 2020, builds from this theory to argue that intersectional environmentalism means that “social [and] environmental justice are intertwined and environmental advocacy that disregards this connection is harmful and incomplete.”[23]

Second Pillar: Scale

[edit]

The second pillar of Critical EJ is a focus on the role of scale in the production and possible resolution of environmental injustices.[20] Critical EJ embraces multi-scalar methodological and theoretical approaches order to better comprehend the complex spatial and temporal causes, consequences, and possible resolutions of EJ struggles.[21] Julie Sze writes, “thinking globally and acting locally also demands that people more fully comprehend the relationship between the local and the global or, in other words, to consider scale”.[20] Scale is deeply racialized, gendered, and classed. While the conclusions of climate scientists are remarkably clear that anthropogenic climate change is occurring at a dramatic pace and with increasing intensity. David Pellow writes in his 2016 publication Toward A Critical Environmental Justice Studies that “this is also happening unevenly, with people of color, the poor, indigenous peoples, peoples of the global South, and women suffering the most.”[21]  

Pellow further contextualizes scale through temporal dimensions. For instance, how does the emergence and use of coal-fired power plants and petroleum-based economics develop and change over historical periods, and in turn unveiling the social causes of our ecological crises.[20] Pellow observes in his 2017 publication What is Critical Environmental Justice that while “a molecule of carbon dioxide or nitrous oxide can occur in an instant, … it remains in the atmosphere for more than a century, so the decisions we make at one point in time can have dramatic ramifications for generations to come”.[20] Pollution does not stay where it starts, and so consideration must be taken as to the scale of an issue rather than solely its effects.

Third Pillar: Social Inequalities

[edit]

The third pillar of Critical EJ is the view that social inequalities - from racism to speciesism - are deeply embedded in society and reinforced by state power, and therefore the current social order stands as a fundamental obstacle to social and environmental justice.[20] Pellow argues in his 2017 publication What is Critical Environmental Justice that social change movements may be better off thinking and acting beyond the state and capital as targets of reform and/or as reliable partners.[21] Furthermore, that scholars and activists are not asking how they might build environmentally resilient communities that exist beyond the state, but rather how they might do so with a different model of state intervention.SOURCE Pellow believes that by building and supporting strongly democratic practices, relationships, and institutions, movements for social change will become less dependent upon the state, while any elements of the state they do work through may become more robustly democratic.[20]

He contextualizes this pillar with activist the anarchist-inspired Common Ground Collective, which was co-created by Scott Crow to provide services for survivors of Hurricane Katrina on the Gulf Coast in 2005.[20] Crow gave insight as to what change outside of state power looks like, telling Pellow:[20]

We did service work, but it was a revolutionary analysis and practice. We created a horizontal organization that defied the state and did our work in spite of the state … not only did we feed people and give them aid and hygiene kits and things like that, but we also stopped housing from being bulldozed, we cut the locks on schools when they said schools couldn’t be opened, and we cleaned the schools out because the students and the teachers wanted that to happen. And we didn’t do a one size fits all like the Red Cross would do – we asked the communities, every community we went into, we asked multiple people, the street sex workers, the gangsters, the church leaders, everybody, we talked to them: what can we do to help your neighborhood, to help your community, to help you? And that made us different because for me, it’s the overlay of anarchism. Instead of having one franchise thing, you just have concepts, and you just pick the components that match the needs of the people there.

Fourth Pillar: Indispensability

[edit]

The fourth pillar of Critical EJ centers on a concept David Pellow calls “Indispensability”. Joen Márquez introduces the concept of “racial expendability” in his book Black and Brown Solidarity, in which he argues that “black and brown bodies are, in the eyes of the state and its constituent legal system, generally viewed as criminal, deficient, threatening, and deserving of violent discipline and even obliteration.”[20] Critical EJ builds on this work by countering the ideology of white supremacy and human dominionism, and articulating the perspective that excluded, marginalized, and other populations, beings, and things - both human and nonhuman - must be viewed not as expensable but rather an indispensable to our collective futures.[21] Pellow uses racial indispensability when referring to people of color and socioecological indispensability when referring to broader communities within and across the human/nonhuman divide and their relationships to one another.[21] Pellow expands writing in Toward A Critical Environmental Justice Studies that “racial indispensability is intended to challenge the logic of racial expendability and is the idea that institutions, policies, and practices that support and perpetrate anti-Black racism suffer from the flawed assumption that the future of African Americans  is  somehow  de-linked  from  the  future  of  White  communities.”[21]

History

[edit]
Highway marker in Afton commemorating the 1982 North Carolina PCB landfill protests

Traces of environmental injustices span millennia of unrecorded history. Indigenous peoples experienced environmental devastation of a genocidal kind before federal recognition. Origins of the environmental justice movement can be traced to the Indigenous Environmental Movement, which has involved Indigenous populations fighting against displacement and assimilation for sovereignty and land rights for hundreds of years.

The terms 'environmental justice’ and ‘environmental’ racism’ did not enter the common vernacular until residents of Warren County, North Carolina protested against a landfill designed to accept polychlorinated biphenyls in the 1982 PCB protests.

Thirty-thousand gallons of PCB fluid lined 270 miles of roadway in fourteen North Carolina Counties, and the state announced that a landfill would be built rather than undergoing permanent detoxification.[24] Warren County was chosen, the poorest county in the state with a per capita income of around $5,000 in 1980[1], and the site was set for the predominantly Black community of Afton. Its residents protested for six-weeks, leading to over 500 arrests.[25][26]

That the protests in Warren County were led by civilians led to the basis of future and modern-day environmental, grassroots organizations fighting for environmental justice. Deborah Ferruccio, a contributor to the protest, explained in an interview with The Warren Record that those present were ordinary people.[27] Her husband Ken Ferruccio learned of the PCB dumping after reading newspapers meant for their garden mulch,[27] and days later he and Rev. Leon White led a “humane blockade” to prevent trucks from arriving at the landfill.[28] After being arrested for the demonstration, Furriccio continued his defiance against the county by refusing to post bail and going on a nineteen-day hunger strike.[28]

Rev. Benjamin Chavis was serving for the United Church of Christ (UCC) Commission for Racial Justice when he was sent to Warren County for the protests. Chavis was among the 500 arrested for taking part in the nonviolent protests and is credited with having coined the term “environmental racism” while in the Warren County jail.[29] His involvement, alongside Rev. Leon White, who also served for the UCC, laid the foundation for more activism and consciousness-raising.[30] Chavis would later recall in a New Yorker’s article titled “Fighting Environmental Racism in North Carolina” that while “Warren County made headlines … [he] knew in the eighties you couldn’t just say there was discrimination. You had to prove it.”[31] Fighting for change, not recognition, is an additional factor of environmental justice as a social movement.  

In response to the Warren County Protests, two cross-sectional studies were conducted to determine the demographics of those exposed to uncontrolled toxic waste sites and commercial hazardous waste facilities. The United Church of Christ's Commission for Racial Justice studied the placement of hazardous waste facilities in the US and found that race was the most important factor predicting placement of these facilities.[32] These studies were followed by widespread objections and lawsuits against hazardous waste disposal in poor, generally Black, communities.[33][34] The mainstream environmental movement began to be criticized for its predominately white affluent leadership, emphasis on conservation, and failure to address social equity concerns.[35][36]

The EPA established the Environmental Equity Work Group (EEWG) in 1990 in response to additional findings by social scientists that “racial minority and low-income populations bear a higher environmental risk burden than the general population’ and that the EPA’s inspections failed to adequately protect low-income communities of color”.[15] In 1992, the EPA published Environmental Equity: Reducing Risks for All Communities - the first time the agency embarked on a systematic examination of environmental risks to communities of color. This acted as their direction of addressing environmental justice.[15]

In 1993 the EPA founded the National Environmental Justice Advisory Council (NEJAC). In 1994 the office’s name was changed to the Office of Environmental Justice as a result of public criticism on the difference between equity and justice. SOURCE That same year, President Bill Clinton issued Executive Order 12898, which created the Interagency Working Group on Environmental Justice.[15] The working group sought to address environmental justice in minority populations and low-income populations.[15] David Pellow writes that the executive order “remains the cornerstone of environmental justice regulation in the US, with the EPA as its ventral arbiter”.[15]

Emergence of global movement

[edit]

Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, grassroots movements and environmental organizations advocated for regulations that increased the costs of hazardous waste disposal in the US and other industrialized nations. However, this led to a surge in exports of hazardous waste to the Global South during the 1980s and 1990s. This global environmental injustice, including the disposal of toxic waste, land appropriation, and resource extraction, sparked the formation of the global environmental justice movement.

Environmental justice as an international subject commenced at the First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit in 1991, held in Washington, DC. The four-day summit was sponsored by the United Church of Christ’s Commission for Racial Justice. With around 1,100 persons in attendance, representation included all 50 states as well as Puerto Rico, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria, and the Marshall Islands.[37][38] The summit broadened the environmental justice movement beyond its anti-toxins focus to include issues of public health, worker safety, land use, transportation, housing, resource allocation, and community empowerment.[38] The summit adopted 17 Principles of Environmental Justice, which were later disseminated at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio, Brazil. The 17 Principles have a likeness in the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development.[39]

In the summer of 2002, a coalition of non-governmental organizations met in Bali to prepare final negotiations for the 2002 Earth Summit. Organizations included CorpWatch, World Rainforest Movement, Friends of the Earth International, the Third World Network, and the Indigenous Environmental Network.[40] They sought to articulate the concept of climate justice.[41] During their time together, the organizations codified the Bali Principles of Climate Justice, a 27-point program identifying and organizing the climate justice movement. Meena Raman, Head of Programs at the Third World Network, explained that in their writing they “drew heavily on the concept of environmental justice, with a significant contribution from movements in the United States, and recognized that economic inequality, ethnicity, and geography played roles in determining who bore the brunt of environmental pollution”. At the 2007 United Nations Climate Conference, or COP13, in Bali, representatives from the Global South and low-income communities from the North created a coalition titled “Climate Justice Now!”. CJN! Issued a series of “genuine solutions” that echoed the Bali Principles.[40]

Initially, the environmental justice movement focused on addressing toxic hazards and injustices faced by marginalized racial groups within affluent nations. However, during the 1991 Leadership Summit, its scope broadened to encompass public health, worker safety, land use, transportation, and other issues. Over time, the movement expanded further to include considerations of gender, international injustices, and intra-group disparities among disadvantaged populations.

Scope

[edit]

Environmental justice has evolved into a comprehensive global movement, introducing numerous concepts to political ecology, including ecological debt, environmental racism, climate justice, food sovereignty, corporate accountability, ecocide, sacrifice zones, and environmentalism of the poor. It aims to augment human rights law, which traditionally overlooked the relationship between the environment and human rights. Despite attempts to integrate environmental protection into human rights law, challenges persist, particularly concerning climate justice.

Scholars such as Kyle Powys Whyte and Dina Gilio-Whitaker have extended the discourse on environmental justice concerning Indigenous peoples and settler-colonialism. Gilio-Whitaker critiques distributive justice, which assumes a capitalistic commodification of land inconsistent with Indigenous worldviews. Whyte explores environmental justice within the context of colonialism's catastrophic environmental impacts on Indigenous peoples' traditional livelihoods and identities.

Environmental discrimination and conflict

[edit]

The environmental justice movement seeks to address environmental discrimination and environmental racism associated with hazardous waste disposal, resource extraction, land appropriation, and other activities.[42] This environmental discrimination results in the loss of land-based traditions and economies,[43] armed violence (especially against women and indigenous people)[44] environmental degradation, and environmental conflict.[45] The global environmental justice movement arises from these local place-based conflicts in which local environmental defenders frequently confront multi-national corporations. Local outcomes of these conflicts are increasingly influenced by trans-national environmental justice networks.[5][6]

There are many divisions along which an unjust distribution of environmental burdens may fall. Within the US, race is the most important determinant of environmental injustice.[46][47] In other countries, poverty or caste (India) are important indicators.[48] Tribal affiliation is also important in some countries.[48] Environmental justice scholars Laura Pulido and David Pellow argue that recognizing environmental racism, as an element stemming from the entrenched legacies of racial capitalism, is crucial to the movement, with white supremacy continuing to shape human relationships with nature and labor.[49][50][51]

Environmental racism

[edit]

Environmental racism is a pervasive and complex issue that affects communities all over the world. It is a form of systemic discrimination that is grounded in the intersection of race, class, and environmental factors.[34] At its core, environmental racism refers to the disproportionate exposure of certain communities, mostly those that are marginalised, to environmental hazards such as pollution, toxic waste, and other environmental risks. These communities are often located near industrial sites, waste facilities, and other sources of pollution that can have serious health impacts. Environmental racism has a long and troubling history, with many examples dating back to the early 20th century. For instance, the practice of "redlining" in the US, which involved denying loans and insurance to communities of colour, often led to these communities being located in areas with high levels of pollution and environmental hazards.[52] Today, environmental racism continues to be a significant environmental justice issue, with many low-income communities and communities of colour facing disproportionate exposure to pollution and other environmental risks. This can have serious consequences for the health and well-being of these communities, leading to higher rates of asthma, cancer, and other illnesses.[34] Addressing environmental racism requires a multifaceted approach that tackles the underlying social, economic, and political factors that contribute to its persistence. More particularly, environmental justice scholars from Latin America and elsewhere advocate to understand this issue through the lens of decolonisation.[53][54] The latter underlies the fact that environmental racism emanates from the colonial projects of the West and its current reproduction of colonial dynamics.

Hazardous waste

[edit]

As environmental justice groups have grown more successful in developed countries such as the United States, the burdens of global production have been shifted to the Global South where less-strict regulations make waste disposal cheaper. Export of toxic waste from the US escalated throughout the 1980s and 1990s.[55][42] Many impacted countries do not have adequate disposal systems for this waste, and impacted communities are not informed about the hazards they are being exposed to.[56][57]

The Khian Sea waste disposal incident was a notable example of environmental justice issues arising from international movement of toxic waste. Contractors disposing of ash from waste incinerators in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania illegally dumped the waste on a beach in Haiti after several other countries refused to accept it. After more than ten years of debate, the waste was eventually returned to Pennsylvania.[56] The incident contributed to the creation of the Basel Convention that regulates international movement of toxic waste.[58]

Land appropriation

[edit]

Countries in the Global South disproportionately bear the environmental burden of global production and the costs of over-consumption in Western societies. This burden is exacerbated by changes in land use that shift vast tracts of land away from family and subsistence farming toward multi-national investments in land speculation, agriculture, mining, or conservation.[43] Land grabs in the Global South are engendered by neoliberal ideology and differences in legal frameworks, land prices, and regulatory practices that make countries in the Global South attractive to foreign investments.[43] These land grabs endanger indigenous livelihoods and continuity of social, cultural, and spiritual practices. Resistance to land appropriation through transformative social action is also made difficult by pre-existing social inequity and deprivation; impacted communities are often already struggling just to meet their basic needs.

Water

[edit]

Access to clean water is an indispensable aspect of human life, yet it remains very unequal, disproportionately affecting marginalized communities globally. The burden of water scarcity is particularly noticeable in impoverished urban settings and remote rural areas where inadequate infrastructure, limited financial resources, and environmental degradation converge to create formidable challenges. Marginalized populations, often already grappling with systemic inequalities, encounter heightened vulnerabilities when it comes to securing safe and reliable water sources. Discriminatory practices can further compound these challenges.[59] The ramifications of limited water access are profound, permeating various facets of daily life, including health, education, and overall well-being. Recognizing and addressing these disparities is not only a matter of justice but also crucial for sustainable development. Consequently, there must be efforts towards implementing inclusive water management strategies that prioritize the specific needs of marginalized communities, ensuring equitable access to this fundamental resource and fostering resilience in the face of global water challenges. One way this has been proposed is through Community Based Participatory Development. When this has been applied, as in the case of the Six Nations Indigenous peoples in Canada working with McMaster University researchers, it has shown how community-led sharing and integrating of science and local knowledge can be partnered in response to water quality.[60]

Resource extraction

[edit]

Resource extraction is a prime example of a tool based on colonial dynamics that engenders environmental racism.[61] Hundreds of studies have shown that marginalized communities, often indigenous communities, are disproportionately burdened by the negative environmental consequences of resource extraction.[3] Communities near valuable natural resources are frequently saddled with a resource curse wherein they bear the environmental costs of extraction and a brief economic boom that leads to economic instability and ultimately poverty.[3] Indigenous communities living near valuable natural resources face even more discrimination, since they are in most cases simply displaced from their home.[61] Power disparities between extraction industries and impacted communities lead to acute procedural injustice in which local communities are unable to meaningfully participate in decisions that will shape their lives.

Council member Debora Juarez gives a speech at the designation of May 5th as Seattle's Day of Awareness for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.

Studies have also shown that extraction of critical minerals, timber, and petroleum may be associated with armed violence in communities that host mining operations.[44] The government of Canada found that resource extraction leads to missing and murdered indigenous women in communities impacted by mines and infrastructure projects such as pipelines.[62] The Environmental Justice Atlas, that documents conflicts of environmental justice, demonstrates multiple conflicts with high violence on indigenous populations around resource extraction.[63]

Unequal exchange

[edit]

Unequal exchange is a term used to describe the unequal economic and trade relationship between countries from the Global North and the Global South. The idea is that the exchange of goods and services between these countries is not equal, with Global North countries benefiting more than the others.[64] This occurs for a variety of reasons such as differences in labor costs, technology, and access to resources. Unequal exchange perceives this framework of trade through the lens of decolonisation: colonial power dynamics have led to a trade system where northern countries can trade their knowledge and technology at a very high price against natural resources, materials and labor at a very low price from southern countries.[65] This is kept in place by mechanisms such as enforceable patents, trade regulations and price setting by institutions such as the World Bank or the International Monetary Fund, where northern countries hold most of the voting power.[66] Hence, unequal exchange is a phenomenon that is based on and perpetuates colonial relationships, as it leads to exploitation and enforces existing inequalities between countries of the Global North and Global South. This interdependence also explains the differences in CO2 emissions between northern and southern countries: evidently, since northern countries use many resources and materials of the South, they produce and pollute more.[67][64]

Health impacts of disparate exposure in EJ communities

[edit]

Environmental justice communities that are disproportionately exposed to chemical pollution, reduced air quality, and contaminated water sources may experience overall reduced health.[68] Poverty in these communities can be a factor that increases their exposure to occupational hazards such as chemicals used in agriculture or industry.[69] When workers leave the work environment they may bring chemicals with them on their clothing, shoes, skin, and hair, creating further impacts on their families, including children.[69] Children in EJ communities are uniquely exposed, because they metabolize and absorb contaminants differently than adults.[69] These children are exposed to a higher level of contaminants throughout their lives, beginning in utero (through the placenta), and are at greater risk for adverse health effects like respiratory conditions, gastrointestinal conditions, and mental conditions.[69]

Fast fashion exposes environmental justice communities to occupational hazards such as poor ventilation that can lead to respiratory problems from inhalation of synthetic particles and cotton dust.[70] Textile dyeing can also expose EJ communities to toxins and heavy metals when untreated wastewater enters water systems used by residents and for livestock.[70] 95% of clothing production takes place in low- or middle-income countries where the workers are under-resourced.[70]

Erasure of women

[edit]

Though the environmental justice movement seeks to address discrimination, women have historically been discriminated against as the movement evolves from advocacy to institutional change. While grassroots campaigning activities are often dominated by women, gender inequality is more prevalent in institutionalized activities of organizations dominated by salaried professionals.[71] Women have fought back against this trend by establishing their own domestic and international non-governmental organizations, such as the Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN) and Women’s Earth Alliance (WEA).

The US Environmental Protection Agency’s definition of environmental injustice does not include gender, instead mentioning environmental injustice to concern race, color, national origin, and income. Gender inequalities in governing bodies have been noted to have an impact on the nature of decisions made, and so consequently federal legislation and discussion surrounding environmental justice often does not include factors of sex. Authors David Pellow and Robert Brulle write in “Environmental justice: human health and environmental inequalities” that environmental injustices “affect human beings unequally along the lines of race, gender, class and nation, so an emphasis on any one of these will dilute the explanatory power of any analytical approach”.[71][72]

These inequalities have led to the establishment of the Global Gender and Climate Alliance, set up jointly by the United Nations, the IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature), and WEDO (Women, Environment and Development Organization). These have all been founded to raise the profile of gender issues in climate change policymaking.[71]

In environmental law

[edit]

Cost barriers

[edit]

One of the prominent barriers to minority participation in environmental justice is the initial costs of trying to change the system and prevent companies from dumping their toxic waste and other pollutants in areas with high numbers of minorities living in them. There are massive legal fees involved in fighting for environmental justice and trying to shed environmental racism.[73] For example, in the United Kingdom, there is a rule that the claimant may have to cover the fees of their opponents, which further exacerbates any cost issues, especially with lower-income minority groups; also, the only way for environmental justice groups to hold companies accountable for their pollution and breaking any licensing issues over waste disposal would be to sue the government for not enforcing rules. This would lead to the forbidding legal fees that most could not afford.[74] This can be seen by the fact that out of 210 judicial review cases between 2005 and 2009, 56% did not proceed due to costs.[75]

Relationships to other movements and philosophies

[edit]

Climate justice

[edit]
Emissions of the richest 1% are more than twice that of the poorest 50%.[76] Compliance with the Paris Agreement's 1.5°C goal would require the richest 1% to reduce emissions by at least 30 times, while per-person emissions of the poorest 50% could approximately triple.[76]
Though total CO2 emissions (size of pie charts) differ substantially among high-emitting regions, the pattern of higher income classes emitting more than lower income classes is consistent across regions.[77] The world's top 1% of emitters emit over 1000 times more than the bottom 1%.[77]
Scaling the effect of wealth to the national level: richer (developed) countries emit more CO2 per person than poorer (developing) countries.[78] Emissions are roughly proportional to GDP per person, though the rate of increase diminishes above average GDP/pp of about $10,000.

Climate change and climate justice have also been a component when discussing environmental justice and the greater impact it has on environmental justice communities.[79] Air pollution and water pollution are two contributors of climate change that can have detrimental effects such as extreme temperatures, increase in precipitation, and a rise in sea level.[79][80] Because of this, communities are more vulnerable to events including floods and droughts potentially resulting in food scarcity and an increased exposure to infectious, food-related, and water-related diseases.[79][80][81] Currently, without sufficient treatment, more than 80% of all wastewater generated globally is released into the environment. High-income nations treat, on average, 70% of the wastewater they produce, according to UN Water.[82][83][84]

It has been projected that climate change will have the greatest impact on vulnerable populations.[81]

Climate justice has been influenced by environmental justice, especially grassroots climate justice.[85]

Ocean justice

[edit]

The head of "Ocean Collectiv" and "Urban Ocean Lab", marine biologist, Ayana Elizabeth Johnson describes ocean justice as: "where ocean conservation and issues of social equity meet: Who suffers most from flooding and pollution, and who benefits from conservation measures? As sea levels rise and storms intensify, such questions will only grow more urgent, and fairness must be a central consideration as societies figure out how to answer them"[86]

In December 2023 Biden's administration unveiled a whole strategy to improve ocean justice. The main targets of this strategy:

Environmental groups supported the decision. According to Beth Lowell, the vice president of Oceana (non-profit group): "Offshore drilling, fisheries management and reducing plastic pollution are just a few of the areas where these voices are needed".[87]

In the official document summarizing the new strategy, the administration gave several examples of past implementation of those principles. One of them is Mai Ka Po Mai a strategy for the management of the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument near the Hawaiian Islands conceived after consultations with native communities.[88]

Environmentalism

[edit]

Relative to general environmentalism, environmental justice is seen as having a greater focus on the lives of everyday people and being more grassroots.[89] Environmental justice advocates have argued that mainstream environmentalist movements have sometimes been racist and elitist.[89][90]

Reproductive justice

[edit]

Many participants in the Reproductive Justice Movement see their struggle as linked with those for environmental justice, and vice versa. Loretta Ross describes the reproductive justice framework as addressing "the ability of any woman to determine her own reproductive destiny" and argues this is "linked directly to the conditions in her community – and these conditions are not just a matter of individual choice and access."[91] Such conditions include those central to environmental justice – including the siting of toxic waste and pollution of food, air, and waterways.

Mohawk midwife Katsi Cook founded the Mother's Milk Project in the 1980s to address the toxic contamination of maternal bodies through exposure to fish and water contaminated by a General Motors Superfund site. In underscoring how contamination disproportionately impacted Akwesasne women and their children through gestation and breastfeeding, this project illustrates the intersections between reproductive and environmental justice.[92] Cook explains that, "at the breasts of women flows the relationship of those generations both to society and to the natural world."[93]

Ecofeminism

[edit]

Ecofeminst find the intersection between environmentalism and feminist philosophy. Ecofeminism is not to be confused with movements or studies on the health impacts of women in the environment. Researcher and author Sarah Buckingham explains that the basis of ecofeminism is rooted in the argument that “women’s equality should not be achieved at the expense of worsening the environment, and neither should environmental improvements be gained at the expense of women.”[94] Its origins are drawn in feminist theory, feminist spirituality, animal rights, social ecology, and antinuclear, antimilitarist organizing.[95] On account of its range of intersectionality, ecofeminism has been criticized for its incoherency and lack of potential in addressing climate crisis.[96]

Ecofeminist concerns are taken up by feminist researchers who participate in environmental organizations or contribute to national and international debates. Examples of such include the National Women’s Health Network’s research around industrial and environmental health; critiques of reproductive technology and genetic engineering by the Feminist Network of Resistance to Reproductive and Genetic Engineering (FINRRAGE); and critiques of environmental approaches to population control by the Committee on Women, Population, and the Environment.[95]

Steps to accelerate environmental justice

[edit]
  1. Global acceleration of environmental rule of law: The governments should respect, protect and fulfil the right to a clean and healthy environment, which is key for sustainable development.
  2. Strong national legal frameworks: To help spur equitable and sustainable management of natural resources. These legal frameworks need to incorporate vulnerable, excluded and marginalized communities to access justice, information and participate in decision-making.
  3. Transformation in the way we think: About the rights of future generations and the rights to a healthy environment. It needs to incorporate wide cross-sections of society in the design of environmental policies and decisions.[97]

Around the world

[edit]

Environmental justice campaigns have arisen from local conflicts all over the world. The Environmental Justice Atlas documented 3,100 environmental conflicts worldwide as of April 2020 and emphasised that many more conflicts remained undocumented.[5]

Africa

[edit]

Democratic Republic of the Congo

[edit]

Mining for cobalt and copper in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has resulted in environmental injustice and numerous environmental conflicts including

Conflict minerals mined in the DRC perpetuate armed conflict.

Ethiopia

[edit]

Mining for gold and other minerals has resulted in environmental injustice and environmental conflict in Ethiopia including

  • Lega Dembi mine: thousands of people were exposed to mercury by MIDROC corporation, resulting in poisoned food, death of livestock and many miscairrages and birth defects.
  • Kenticha mine

Kenya

[edit]

Kenya has, since independence in 1963, focused on environmental protectionism. Environmental activists such as Wangari Maathai stood for and defend natural and environmental resources, often coming into conflict with the Daniel Arap Moi and his government. The country has suffered Environmental issues arising from rapid urbanization especially in Nairobi, where the public space, Uhuru Park, and game parks such as the Nairobi National Park have suffered encroachment to pave way for infrastructural developments like the Standard Gage Railway and the Nairobi Expressway. One of the environmental lawyers, Kariuki Muigua, has championed environmental justice and access to information and legal protection, authoring the Environmental Justice Thesis on Kenya's milestones.[98]

Nigeria

[edit]

From 1956 to 2006, up to 1.5 million tons of oil were spilled in the Niger Delta, (50 times the volume spilled in the Exxon Valdez disaster).[99][100] Indigenous people in the region have suffered the loss of their livelihoods as a result of these environmental issues, and they have received no benefits in return for enormous oil revenues extracted from their lands. Environmental conflicts have exacerbated ongoing conflict in the Niger Delta.[101][102][103]

Ogoni people, who are indigenous to Nigeria's oil-rich Delta region have protested the disastrous environmental and economic effects of Shell Oil's drilling and denounced human rights abuses by the Nigerian government and by Shell. Their international appeal intensified dramatically after the execution in 1995 of nine Ogoni activists, including Ken Saro-Wiwa, who was a founder of the nonviolent Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP).[104][101][102][103]

South Africa

[edit]

Under colonial and apartheid governments in South Africa, thousands of black South Africans were removed from their ancestral lands to make way for game parks. Earthlife Africa was formed in 1988, making it Africa's first environmental justice organisation. In 1992, the Environmental Justice Networking Forum (EJNF), a nationwide umbrella organization designed to coordinate the activities of environmental activists and organizations interested in social and environmental justice, was created. By 1995, the network expanded to include 150 member organizations and by 2000, it included over 600 member organizations.[105]

With the election of the African National Congress (ANC) in 1994, the environmental justice movement gained an ally in government. The ANC noted "poverty and environmental degradation have been closely linked" in South Africa.[attribution needed] The ANC made it clear that environmental inequalities and injustices would be addressed as part of the party's post-apartheid reconstruction and development mandate. The new South African Constitution, finalized in 1996, includes a Bill of Rights that grants South Africans the right to an "environment that is not harmful to their health or well-being" and "to have the environment protected, for the benefit of present and future generations through reasonable legislative and other measures that

  1. prevent pollution and ecological degradation;
  2. promote conservation; and
  3. secure ecologically sustainable development and use of natural resources while promoting justifiable economic and social development".[105]

South Africa's mining industry is the largest single producer of solid waste, accounting for about two-thirds of the total waste stream.[vague] Tens of thousands of deaths have occurred among mine workers as a result of accidents over the last century.[106] There have been several deaths and debilitating diseases from work-related illnesses like asbestosis.[citation needed] For those who live next to a mine, the quality of air and water is poor. Noise, dust, and dangerous equipment and vehicles can be threats to the safety of those who live next to a mine as well.[citation needed] These communities are often poor and black and have little choice over the placement of a mine near their homes. The National Party introduced a new Minerals Act that began to address environmental considerations by recognizing the health and safety concerns of workers and the need for land rehabilitation during and after mining operations. In 1993, the Act was amended to require each new mine to have an Environmental Management Program Report (EMPR) prepared before breaking ground. These EMPRs were intended to force mining companies to outline all the possible environmental impacts of the particular mining operation and to make provision for environmental management.[105]

In October 1998, the Department of Minerals and Energy released a White Paper entitled A Minerals and Mining Policy for South Africa, which included a section on Environmental Management. The White Paper states "Government, in recognition of the responsibility of the State as custodian of the nation's natural resources, will ensure that the essential development of the country's mineral resources will take place within a framework of sustainable development and in accordance with national environmental policy, norms, and standards". It adds that any environmental policy "must ensure a cost-effective and competitive mining industry."[105]

Asia

[edit]

Noah Diffenbaugh and Marshall Burke in their study of inequality in Asia demonstrated the interactionalism of economic inequality and global warming. For instance, globalization and industrialization increased the chances of global warming. However, industrialization also allowed wealth inequality to perpetuate. For example, New Delhi is the epicenter of the industrial revolution in the Indian continent, but there is significant wealth disparity. Furthermore, because of global warming, countries like Sweden and Norway can capitalize on warmer temperatures, while most of the world's poorest countries are significantly poorer than they would have been if global warming had not occurred.[107][108]

China

[edit]
Cattle in the River Ganges with pollution on the bank

In China, factories create harmful waste such as nitrogen oxide and sulfur dioxide which cause health risks. Journalist and science writer Fred Pearce notes that in China "most monitoring of urban air still concentrates on one or at most two pollutants, sometimes particulates, sometimes nitrogen oxides or sulfur dioxides or ozone. Similarly, most medical studies of the impacts of these toxins look for links between single pollutants and suspected health effects such as respiratory disease and cardiovascular conditions."[109] The country emits about a third of all the human-made sulfur dioxide (SO2), nitrogen oxides (NOx), and particulates pollution in the world.[109] The Global Burden of Disease Study, an international collaboration, estimates that 1.1 million Chinese die from the effects of this air pollution each year, roughly a third of the global death toll."[109] The economic cost of deaths due to air pollution is estimated at 267 billion yuan (US$38 billion) per year.[110]

Indonesia

[edit]

Environmental conflicts in Indonesia include:

  • The Arun gas field where ExxonMobil's development of a natural gas export industry contributed to the insurgency in Aceh in which secessionist fighters led by the Free Aceh Movement attempted to gain independence from the central government which had taken billions in gas revenues from the region without much benefit to the Aceh province. Violence directed toward the gas industry led Exxon to contract with the Indonesian military for protection of the Arun field and subsequent human rights abuses in Aceh.[111]

Malaysia

[edit]

Environmental justice movements in Malaysia have arisen from conflicts including:

South Korea

[edit]

Environmental justice movements in South Korea have arisen from conflicts including:

Australia

[edit]
World Environment Day, 5th June 2011, tens of thouands of people rallied around Australia to say Yes to a safe climate and in support of a carbon price.

Australia has suffered from a number of environmental injustices, which have usually been caused by polluting corporate projects geared towards extracting natural resources. For example, discriminatory siting of nuclear and hazardous waste facilities.[112][113] These projects have been detrimental to local climates, biodiversity, and the health of local citizen populations from poorer economic areas. They have also faced little resistance from local and national governments, who tend to cite their ‘economic’ benefits. However, these projects have faced strong resistance from environmental justice organizations, community, and indigenous groups.[114] Australia has a prominent Indigenous population, and they often disproportionately face some of the worst impacts of these projects.

  • WestConnex Highway Project, Sydney and New South Wales (NSW)

The WestConnex Highway Project emerged as an answer to Sydney's lack of infrastructure to cope as a fast growing city. The highway project is currently under construction, covers 33 km of new and improved highway, and will link up to the city's M4 and M5 highways.The newest WestConnex toll roads opened in 2019. The NSW government believe that the highway is the ‘missing link’ to the city's problem of traffic congestion, and has argued that the project will provide further economic benefits such as job creation.

The WestConnex Action Group (WAG) have said that residents close to the highway have been negatively affected by its high levels of air pollution, caused by an increase in traffic and unventilated smokestacks in its tunnels. Protesters have also argued that the close proximity of the highway will put children especially at risk.

The highway has faced resistance in a variety of forms, including a long-running occupation camp in Sydney Park, as well as confrontations with police and construction workers that have led to arrests. The WAG has set up a damage register for people whose property has been damaged by the highway, in order to document the extent of the damages, and support those who have been affected. The WAG have done this through campaigning for a damage repaid fund, independent damage assessment and potential class action.[115]

  • Yeelirrie Uranium Mine, Western Australia

The Yeelirrie Uranium Mine was facilitated by Canadian company Cameco. The mine aimed to dig a 9 km open mine pit and destroy 2,400 hectares of traditional lands, including the Seven Sisters Dreaming Songline, important to the Tjiwarl people. The mine has faced strong resistance from the Tjiwral people, especially its women, for over decade.

The mine is the largest uranium deposit in the country, and uses nine million litres of water, whilst generating millions of tonnes of radioactive waste. Around 36 million tonnes of this waste will be produced whilst the mine is operational, which is set to be until 2043.

A group of Tjiwral women took Cameco to court, to initial success. The Environmental Protection Authority (EPA) halted the mine because it was very likely to wipe out several species, including rare stygofauna, the entire western population of a rare saltbush, and harm other wild life like the Malleefowl, Princess parrot and Greater bilby. The state and federal authorities, however, went against the EPA and approved the mine in 2019.[116]

  • SANTOS Barossa offshore gas in Timor Sea, Northern Territory (NT)

In March 2021, South Australia Northern Territory Oil Search (SANTOS) invested in the Barossa gas field in the Timor Sea, Northern Territory, to great reception from the NT government, saying that it will provide jobs for the local area. The move was condemned by environmental justice organisations, saying that it will have grave impacts on the climate and biodiversity. Crucially, they stressed that the Tiwi people, owners of the local islands, were not adequately consulted, and were worried that any spills would damage local flatback and Olive Ridley turtle populations.

This disregard for the Tiwi people sparked protests from a number of groups, including one in front of the SANTOS Darwin headquarters demanding an end to the Barossa gas project. In September 2021, a coalition of environmental justice organisations from Australia, South Korea and Japan, united under the name Stop Barossa Gas to oppose the project.[117] In March 2022, the Tiwi people filed for a court injunction to stop KEXIM and Korea Trade and Investment Corporation (Korean development finance institutions) funding the project with almost $1bn. The Tiwi people did this on the basis of a lack of consultation from SANTOS, and the detrimental environmental impacts the project will have. In June 2022, the Tiwi people filed another lawsuit for the same reasons, but this time directly against SANTOS.[118]

Europe

[edit]

The European Environment Agency (EEA) reports that exposure to environmental harms such as pollution is correlated with poverty,[119] and that poorer countries suffer from environmental harms while higher income countries produce the majority of the pollution. Western Europe has more extensive evidence of environmental inequality.[119]

Romani peoples are ethnic minorities that experience environmental discrimination. Discriminatory laws force Romani people In many countries to live in slums or ghettos with poor access to running water and sewage, or where they are exposed to hazardous wastes.[120]

The European Union is trying to strive towards environmental justice by putting into effect declarations that state that all people have a right to a healthy environment. The Stockholm Declaration, the 1987 Brundtland Commission's Report – "Our Common Future", the Rio Declaration, and Article 37 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, all are ways that the Europeans have put acts in place to work toward environmental justice.[120]

Sweden

[edit]

Sweden became the first country to ban DDT in 1969.[121] In the 1980s, women activists organized around preparing jam made from pesticide-tainted berries, which they offered to the members of parliament.[122][123] Parliament members refused, and this has often been cited as an example of direct action within ecofeminism.

United Kingdom

[edit]

Whilst the predominant agenda of the Environmental Justice movement in the United States has been tackling issues of race, inequality, and the environment, environmental justice campaigns around the world have developed and shifted in focus. For example, the EJ movement in the United Kingdom is quite different. It focuses on issues of poverty and the environment, but also tackles issues of health inequalities and social exclusion.[124] A UK-based NGO, named the Environmental Justice Foundation, has sought to make a direct link between the need for environmental security and the defense of basic human rights.[125] They have launched several high-profile campaigns that link environmental problems and social injustices. A campaign against illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing highlighted how 'pirate' fisherman are stealing food from local, artisanal fishing communities.[126][127] They have also launched a campaign exposing the environmental and human rights abuses involved in cotton production in Uzbekistan. Cotton produced in Uzbekistan is often harvested by children for little or no pay. In addition, the mismanagement of water resources for crop irrigation has led to the near eradication of the Aral Sea.[128] The Environmental Justice Foundation has successfully petitioned large retailers such as Wal-mart and Tesco to stop selling Uzbek cotton.[129]

Building of alternatives to climate change

[edit]

In France, numerous Alternatiba events, or villages of alternatives, are providing hundreds of alternatives to climate change and lack of environmental justice, both in order to raise people's awareness and to stimulate behaviour change. They have been or will be organized in over sixty different French and European cities, such as Bilbao, Brussels, Geneva, Lyon or Paris.

North and Central America

[edit]

Belize

[edit]

Environmental justice movements arising from local conflicts in Belize include:

  • The government of Belize began granting oil concessions without consulting local communities since 2010, with offshore oil drilling being allowed without consultation with local fishermen or the tourism sector, which are the main economic activities in the area, and affecting Mayan and Garifuna communities. Environmental advocacy group, Oceana, collected over 20,000 signatures in 2011 to trigger a national referendum on offshore oil drilling, however, the government of Belize invalidated over 8,000 signatures, preventing the possibility of an official referendum. In response, Oceana and partner organizations organized an unofficial "People's Referendum," which resulted in 90% of Belizeans voting against offshore exploration and drilling. Belize's Supreme Court declared offshore drilling contracts issued by the Government of Belize in 2004 and 2007 invalid in 2013, but the government reconsidered initiating offshore drilling in 2015, with possible new regulations allowing oil and gas exploration in 99% of Belize's territorial waters. In 2022, Oceana began collecting signatures for another moratorium referendum.[130]
  • Chalillo Dam

Canada

[edit]

Environmental justice movements arising from local conflicts in Canada include:

Dominican Republic
[edit]

Environmental justice movements arising from local conflicts in the Dominican Republic:

Guatemala

[edit]

Environmental justice movements arising from local conflicts in Guatemala include

El Salvador

[edit]

Environmental justice movements arising from local conflicts in El Salvador include:

The Canadian company Pacific Rim Mining Corporation operates a gold mine on the site of El Dorado, San Isidro, in the department of Cabañas. The mine has had hugely negative impacts on the local environment, including the reduction of accessibility to fresh water due to the water intensive mining process, as well as the contamination of the local water supply, which negatively affected the health of local citizens and their live stock. Also, Salvadorian investigators found dangerously high levels of arsenic in two rivers close to the mine.

The operations of the mine has caused conflicts, increased divisions in the community, and prompted threats and violence against opposition to the mine. Following the suspension of the project in 2008 due to resistance from local groups, this violence escalated. As of today, at least half a dozen deaths among local group opposing the mine have been related with the presence of Pacific Rim. The strength of opposition to the mine contributed towards a national movement against the project. In 2008 and 2009, both the incumbent and elected Salvadorian presidents agreed publicly to deny the extension of the licence to Pacific Rim to connote its operations. More recently, the new president Sanchéz Cerén stated “mining is not viable in El Salvador.”[131]

Honduras

[edit]

Honduras has experienced a number of environmental justice struggles, particularly related to the mining, hydroelectric, and logging industries. One of the most high-profile cases was the assassination of Berta Caceres, a Honduran indigenous and environmental rights activist who opposed the construction of the Agua Zarca Dam on the Gualcarque River. Caceres' murder in 2016 sparked widespread outrage and drew international attention to the risks faced by environmental and indigenous activists in Honduras.[132]

Mexico

[edit]

Environmental justice movements arising from local conflicts in Mexico include

Nicaragua

[edit]

Environmental justice movements arising from local conflicts in Nicaragua include:

In 2012, the Nicaraguan government approved the construction of the Grand Canal, which will be 286 km long. A large section of the new canal will run through Lake Nicaragua, which is an important source of fresh water for the country. The canal will also have a width of 83 meters, and depth of 27.5 meters, making it suitable for large-range ships. Related infrastructures include two ports, an airport and an oil pipeline.

Opponents to the construction of the canal, such as the Coordinadora de la comunidad negra creole indígena de Bluefields (CCNCB), fear the impacts it will have on the biodiversity, and protected areas like Bosawás and the Bluefields wetlands. Opponents also fear the impacts on the Indigenous and tribal people that the canal would displace, such as the Miskito, Ulwa and Creole. To date, the Nicaraguan government has not made public the results of various viability studies.

Since the approval of the construction of the canal, environmental justice and indigenous groups have presented petitions for review to national courts, as well as one to the International Human Rights Commission. In 2017, these groups suffered a setback, when the National Court rejected the petition to refuse the "Law of the Grand Canal”.[133]

United States

[edit]

Definitions of environmental inequality typically emphasize either 'disparate exposure' (unequal exposure to environmental harm) or 'discriminatory intent' (often based on race). Disparate exposure has health and social impacts.[134] Poverty and race are associated with environmental injustice. Poor people account for more than 20% of the human health impacts from industrial toxic air releases, compared to 12.9% of the population nationwide.[135] Some studies that test statistically for effects of race and ethnicity, while controlling for income and other factors, suggest racial gaps in exposure that persist across all bands of income.[136]

States may also see placing toxic facilities near poor neighborhoods as preferential from a Cost Benefit Analysis (CBA) perspective. A CBA may favor placing a toxic facility near a city of 20,000 poor people than near a city of 5,000 wealthy people.[137] Terry Bossert of Range Resources reportedly has said that it deliberately locates its operations in poor neighborhoods instead of wealthy areas where residents have more money to challenge its practices.[138] Northern California's East Bay Refinery Corridor is an example of the disparities associated with race and income and proximity to toxic facilities.[139]

In Seattle, Washington, the Duwamish River Community Coalition (DRCC) was formed in 2001 in response to the designation of the Duwamish River as a Superfund site.[140] DRCC works with local communities and both private and public organizations to address the disparate exposure to air and water pollution families of the Duwamish Valley face. Residents of the Duwamish Valley are a population made of primarily South and Central American immigrants of low income, indigenous peoples, and refugees.[141]

African-Americans
[edit]

African-Americans are affected by a variety of Environmental Justice issues. One notorious example is the "Cancer Alley" region of Louisiana.[142] This 85-mile stretch of the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans is home to 125 companies that produce one quarter of the petrochemical products manufactured in the United States. The nickname was given due to the high rates of residents diagnosed with cancer compared to the United States average.[143] The United States Commission on Civil Rights has concluded that the African-American community has been disproportionately affected by Cancer Alley as a result of Louisiana's current state and local permit system for hazardous facilities, as well as their low socio-economic status and limited political influence.[144] Another incidence of long-term environmental injustice occurred in the "West Grove" community of Miami, Florida. From 1925 to 1970, the predominately poor, African American residents of the "West Grove" endured the negative effects of exposure to carcinogenic emissions and toxic waste discharge from a large trash incinerator called Old Smokey.[145] Despite official acknowledgement as a public nuisance, the incinerator project was expanded in 1961. It was not until the surrounding, predominantly white neighborhoods began to experience the negative impacts from Old Smokey that the legal battle began to close the incinerator.

More so, many African-American residents have experienced missed or overlooked health issues that were cause by the environmental disparity of their communities. Unfortunately, many of these complications were overlooked by the healthcare industry and comprised the health of those struggling with respiratory and heart problems. The American Heart Association has compiled data analysis that shows the relationship between air pollution exposure and cardiovascular illness and death.[146]

Indigenous Groups
[edit]

Indigenous groups are often the victims of environmental injustices. Native Americans have suffered abuses related to uranium mining in the American West. Churchrock, New Mexico, in Navajo territory was home to the longest continuous uranium mining in any Navajo land. From 1954 until 1968, the tribe leased land to mining companies who did not obtain consent from Navajo families or report any consequences of their activities. Not only did the miners significantly deplete the limited water supply, but they also contaminated what was left of the Navajo water supply with uranium. Kerr-McGee and United Nuclear Corporation, the two largest mining companies, argued that the Federal Water Pollution Control Act did not apply to them, and maintained that Native American land is not subject to environmental protections. The courts did not force them to comply with US clean water regulations until 1980.[144]

The Inuit community in northern Quebec have faced disproportionate exposure to persistent organic pollutants (POPs) including dioxins and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). Some of these pollutants may include pesticides used decades before in the United States.[147] PCBs bioaccumulate and biomagnify within the fatty tissues of organisms, so the traditional high-fat sea animal diet of the Inuit has posed significant health impacts to both adults and unborn infants.[147] Although the production of PCBs was banned internationally in 2001 by the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants, they can exist in the environment and biosphere for decades or longer. They pose a significant risk to newborns due to intrauterine exposure and concentration within breast milk.[148]

Latinos
[edit]

The most common example of environmental injustice among Latinos is the exposure to pesticides faced by farmworkers. After DDT and other chlorinated hydrocarbon pesticides were banned in the United States in 1972, farmers began using more acutely toxic organophosphate pesticides such as parathion. A large portion of farmworkers in the US are working as undocumented immigrants, and as a result of their political disadvantage, are not able to protest against regular exposure to pesticides or benefit from the protections of Federal laws.[144] Exposure to chemical pesticides in the cotton industry also affects farmers in India and Uzbekistan. Banned throughout much of the rest of the world because of the potential threat to human health and the natural environment, Endosulfan is a highly toxic chemical, the safe use of which cannot be guaranteed in the many developing countries it is used in. Endosulfan, like DDT, is an organochlorine and persists in the environment long after it has killed the target pests, leaving a deadly legacy for people and wildlife.[149]

Residents of cities along the US-Mexico border are also affected. Maquiladoras are assembly plants operated by American, Japanese, and other foreign countries, located along the US-Mexico border. The maquiladoras use cheap Mexican labor to assemble imported components and raw material, and then transport finished products back to the United States. Much of the waste ends up being illegally dumped in sewers, ditches, or in the desert. Along the Lower Rio Grande Valley, maquiladoras dump their toxic wastes into the river from which 95 percent of residents obtain their drinking water. In the border cities of Brownsville, Texas, and Matamoros, Mexico, the rate of anencephaly (babies born without brains) is four times the national average.[150]

Youth
[edit]

Held v. Montana was the first state constitutional law climate lawsuit to go to trial in the United States, on June 12, 2023.[151] The case was filed in March 2020 by sixteen youth residents of Montana, then aged 2 through 18,[152] who argued that the state's support of the fossil fuel industry had worsened the effects of climate change on their lives, thus denying their right to a "clean and healthful environment in Montana for present and future generations"[153]:Art. IX, § 1 as required by the Constitution of Montana.[154] On August 14, 2023, the trial court judge ruled in the youth plaintiffs' favor, though the state indicated it would appeal the decision.[155] Montana's Supreme Court heard oral arguments on July 10, 2024, its seven justices taking the case under advisement.[156]

South America

[edit]

Environmental justice struggles have been a significant feature of social and political movements in South America, where communities have faced the impacts of environmental degradation and resource extraction for decades. In particular, mining in South America has led to conflicts between mining companies, governments, and local communities over issues such as land rights, water use, and pollution. Indigenous peoples in particular have been disproportionately affected by mining, with many communities experiencing displacement, loss of traditional livelihoods, and negative health impacts from exposure to toxic chemicals and pollution. A report by Global Witness identifies South America as the most dangerous region in the world for environmental activists, with at least 98 people killed in 2019.[157]

Argentina

[edit]

Environmental justice movements arising from local conflicts in Argentina include

  • Bajo de la Alumbrera mine, Catamarca, Argentina: The Bajo de la Alumbrera mine is an open-pit copper and gold mine located in the northwestern province of Catamarca, Argentina. The mining project began in the late 1990s and has since been the center of a significant environmental justice conflict. The mine is operated by Glencore, which owns 50% of the stocks, while Canadian companies Goldcorp and Yamana Gold hold 37.5% and 12.5% respectively. People have raised concerns over the mine's potential environmental impacts, including water pollution, deforestation, and the displacement of indigenous communities. The mine's operators have also faced accusations of human rights violations, including the use of excessive force against protesters and the violation of workers' rights. Despite these concerns, the mine continues to operate, and its expansion plans have been met with significant resistance from local communities and environmental groups. After La Alumbrera started operations, other mining projects were rejected in Catamarca.[158]

Brazil

[edit]

Environmental justice movements arising from local conflicts in Brazil include

  • Belo Monte Hydroelectric Dam, Para, Brasil: Belo Monte is a hydroelectric project on the Xingú River in Brazil that began construction in 2011 and was completed in 2019. It is currently the fifth-largest hydroelectric dam in the world, by installed capacity. It is owned by a consortium called Norte Energia, mostly owned by the government and funded primarily by BNDES, with mining giant Vale owning around 5% of it. The project is the largest infrastructure complex of the Brazilian government's plan to build over 60 large dams in the Amazon Basin over the next 20 years, which has received numerous criticisms and open resistance from organizations, public opinion, and inhabitants of the region. Its construction has been highly conflictive, having been opposed by indigenous peoples, who were not consulted before the authorization of construction. The project has been criticized for lacking environmental impact assessments prior to the start of the works. The Belo Monte Dam has diverted the flow of the Xingu, devastating an extensive area of the rainforest, affecting over 50,000 people and displacing over 20,000. The dam threatens the survival of indigenous tribes that depend on the river.[159]

Ecuador

[edit]

Notable environmental justice movements in Ecuador have arisen from several local conflicts:

Peru

[edit]

Notable environmental justice conflicts in Peru include

In late March, 2024, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, based in Costa Rica, ruled that the government of Peru is liable for physical and mental harm to people caused by a metallurgical facility’s pollution, and ordered the government to provide free medical care and monetary compensation to victims.[162]

Transnational Movement Networks

[edit]

Many of the Environmental Justice Networks that began in the United States expanded their horizons to include many other countries and became Transnational Networks for Environmental Justice. These networks work to bring Environmental Justice to all parts of the world and protect all citizens of the world to reduce the environmental injustice happening all over the world. Listed below are some of the major Transnational Social Movement Organizations.[56]

  • Amazon Watch - organization that campaigns for the protection of the rainforest, and the rights of Indigenous peoples in the Amazon Basin in Ecuador, Peru, Colombia, and Brazil.
  • Basel Action Network – works to end toxic waste dumping in poor undeveloped countries from the rich developed countries.[163]
  • [1]—a network of activist-researchers that document environmental justice issues around the world.
  • Environmental Justice Organisations, Liabilities and Trade (EJOLT) is a multinational project supported by the European Commission. Civil society organizations and universities from 20 countries in Europe, Africa, Latin-America, and Asia are building up case studies, linking organizations worldwide, and making an interactive global map of Environmental Justice.[164]
  • GAIA (Global Anti-Incinerator Alliance) – works to find different ways to dispose of waste other than incineration. This company has people working in over 77 countries throughout the world.
  • GR (Global Response) – works to educate activists and the upper working class how to protect human rights and the ecosystem.
  • Global Witness - an international NGO that investigates and exposes environmental and human rights abuses, corruption, and conflict associated with the exploitation of natural resources.
  • Greenpeace International – which was the first organization to become the global name of Environmental Justice. Greenpeace works to raise the global consciousness of transnational trade of toxic waste.
  • Health Care without Harm – works to improve public health by reducing the environmental impacts of the health care industry.[165]
  • Indigenous Environmental Network - a North American network of indigenous peoples' organizations that work to protect the environment and promote sustainable development.
  • International Campaign for Responsible Technology – works to promote corporate and government accountability with electronics and how the disposal of technology affect the environment.
  • International POPs Elimination Network – works to reduce and eventually end the use of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) which are harmful to the environment.
  • NDN Collective - is an Indigenous-led organization dedicated to building Indigenous, supporting campaigns like ‘Land Back’, which aims to return Indigenous lands back to Indigenous people.
  • PAN (Pesticide Action Network) – works to replace the use of hazardous pesticides with alternatives that are safe for the environment.[166]
  • Red Latinoamericana de Mujeres Defensoras de Derechos Ambientales - a regional network that works to promote the rights of women environmental defenders and protect the environment in Latin America.

Global Environmental Activism and Policy

Global environmental inequality is evidence that vulnerable populations are disproportionately victimized by environmental degradation as a result of global capitalism and land exploitation.[167] Yet, studies prove these groups have pioneered the need for intersection between human and environmental rights in activism and policy because of their close proximity to environmental issues.[168][167] It is important for environmental regulation to acknowledge the value of this global grassroots movement, led by indigenous women and women of the global south, in determining how institutions such as the United Nations can best deliver environmental justice.[169][170][171] In recent years, the United Nations' approach to issues concerning environmental health has begun to acknowledge the native practices of indigenous women and advocacy of women in vulnerable positions.[167][168][172] Further research by the science community and analysis of environmental issues through a gendered lens are essential next steps for the UN and other governing bodies to curate policy that meets the needs of the women activists leading the environmental justice movement.[173][174][169]

Outer space

[edit]

Over recent years social scientists have begun to view outer space in an environmental conceptual framework.[175] Klinger, an environmental geographer, analyses the environmental features of outer space from the perspective of several schools of geopolitical.[176] From a classical geopolitical approach, for instance, people's exploration of the outer space domain is, in fact, a manifestation of competing and conflicting interests between states, i.e., outer space is an asset used to strengthen and consolidate geopolitical power and has strategic value.[177] From the perspective of environmental geopolitics, the issue of sustainable development has become a consensus politics.[178] Countries thus cede power to international agreements and supranational organizations to manage global environmental issues.[179] Such co-produced practices are followed in the human use of outer space, which means that only powerful nations are capable of reacting to protect the interests of underprivileged countries, so far from there being perfect environmental justice in environmental geopolitics.[180]

Human interaction with outer space is environmentally based since a measurable environmental footprint will be left when modifying the Earth's environment (e.g., local environmental changes from launch sites) to access outer space, developing space-based technologies to study the Earth's environment, exploring space with spacecraft in orbit or by landing on the Moon, etc.[176] Different stakeholders have competing territorial agendas for this vast space; thus, the ownership of these footprints is governed by geopolitical power and relations, which means that human involvement with outer space falls into the field of environmental justice.[176]

Activities on Earth

[edit]

On Earth, the environmental geopolitics of outer space is directly linked to issues of environmental justice - the launch of spacecraft and the impact of their launch processes on the surrounding environment, and the impact of space-based related technologies and facilities on the development process of human society.[176] As both processes require the support of industry, infrastructure, and networks of information and take place in specific locations, this leads to continuous interaction with local territorial governance.[181]

Launches and infrastructures

[edit]

Rockets are generally launched in areas where conventional and potentially catastrophic blast damage can be controlled, generally in an open and unoccupied territory.[182] Despite the absence of human life and habitation, other forms of life exist in these open territories, maintaining the local ecological balance and material cycles.[182] Toxic particulate matter from rocket launches can cause localized acid rain, plant and animal mortality, reduced food production, and other hazards.[183]

Moreover, space activities result in environmental injustice on a global scale. Spacecraft are the only contributors to direct human-derived pollution in the stratosphere, which comes mostly from the launch activities of rich economies in the northern hemisphere, while the global north bears more of the environmental consequences.[184][185]

Environmental injustice is further evidenced by the limited research into the effects on downstream human and non-human communities and the inadequate tracking of pollutants in ecological chains and environments.[186]

Space-based technologies

[edit]

While space-based technologies have been applied to tracking natural disasters and the spread of pollutants,[187] access to these technologies and the monitoring of data is deeply uneven within and between countries, exacerbating environmental injustice. Further, the use of technology by powerful countries can even lead to the creation of policies and institutions in less privileged nations, changing land-use regimes to favor or disadvantage the survival of certain human groups. For example, in the decades following the publication of the first report on the use of satellite imagery to measure rainforest deforestation in the 1980s, several environmental groups rose to prominence and also influenced changes in domestic policy in Brazil.[188]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Size, Julie; London, Jonathan K. (July 2008). "Environmental Justice at the Crossroads". Sociology Compass. 2 (4): 1331–1354. doi:10.1111/j.1751-9020.2008.00131.x.
  2. ^ a b c Schlosberg 2007, p. [page needed].
  3. ^ a b c Malin, Stephanie (June 25, 2019). "Environmental justice and natural resource extraction: intersections of power, equity and access". Environmental Sociology. 5 (2): 109–116. Bibcode:2019EnvSo...5..109M. doi:10.1080/23251042.2019.1608420. S2CID 198588483.
  4. ^ a b Martinez-Alier 2002, p. [page needed].
  5. ^ a b c Scheidel, Arnim (July 2020). "Environmental conflicts and defenders: A global overview". Global Environmental Change. 63: 102104. doi:10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2020.102104. PMC 7418451. PMID 32801483.
  6. ^ a b Martinez-Alier, Joan; Temper, Leah; Del Bene, Daniela; Scheidel, Arnim (May 3, 2016). "Is there a global environmental justice movement?". The Journal of Peasant Studies. 43 (3): 731–755. doi:10.1080/03066150.2016.1141198. S2CID 156535916.
  7. ^ Miller, G. Tyler Jr. (2003). Environmental Science: Working With the Earth (9th ed.). Pacific Grove, California: Brooks/Cole. p. G5. ISBN 0-534-42039-7.
  8. ^ Sze, Julie (2018). Sustainability: Approaches to Environmental Justice and Social Power. NYU Press. ISBN 978-1-4798-9456-7.[page needed]
  9. ^ "Environmental Justice-Related Terms As Defined Across the PSC Agencies" (PDF). U.S. EPA. May 13, 2013.
  10. ^ Environmental Inequality by Julie Gobert https://www.encyclopedie-environnement.org/en/society/environmental-inequalities/
  11. ^ a b Schlosberg, David (2002). Light, Andrew; De-Shalit, Avner (eds.). Moral and Political Reasoning in Environmental Practice. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press. p. 79. ISBN 978-0-262-62164-9.
  12. ^ Zwarteveen, Margreet Z.; Boelens, Rutgerd (February 23, 2014). "Defining, researching and struggling for water justice: some conceptual building blocks for research and action". Water International. 39 (2): 143–158. Bibcode:2014WatIn..39..143Z. doi:10.1080/02508060.2014.891168. S2CID 154913910.
  13. ^ Temper, Leah (February 2019). "Blocking pipelines, unsettling environmental justice: from rights of nature to responsibility to territory". Local Environment. 24 (2): 94–112. Bibcode:2019LoEnv..24...94T. doi:10.1080/13549839.2018.1536698.
  14. ^ a b "What Environmental Justice Means in Indian Country". PBS SoCal. March 6, 2017. Retrieved May 2, 2024.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g As Long As Grass Grows The Indigenous Fight For Environmental Justice, From Colonization To Standing Rock By Dina Gilio Whitaker.
  16. ^ "In historic move, UN declares healthy environment a human right". UNEP. July 28, 2022. Retrieved May 2, 2024.
  17. ^ a b c Nixon 2011, p. [page needed].
  18. ^ Vermeylen, Saskia (2019). "Special issue: environmental justice and epistemic violence". Local Environment. 24 (2): 89–93. doi:10.1080/13549839.2018.1561658. ISSN 1354-9839.
  19. ^ Holifield, Ryan (December 2018). "David Naguib Pellow, What is Critical Environmental Justice?: Cambridge UK and Medford MA, Polity Press, 2018, 206 pp" (PDF). Review of Agricultural, Food and Environmental Studies. 99 (3–4): 303–306. doi:10.1007/s41130-018-0078-5.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Pellow, David N. (2018). What is critical environmental justice?. Cambridge, UK ; Medford, MA, USA: Polity Press. ISBN 978-0-7456-7937-2.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Pellow, David N. (2016). "TOWARD A CRITICAL ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE STUDIES: Black Lives Matter as an Environmental Justice Challenge". Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race. 13 (2): 221–236. doi:10.1017/s1742058x1600014x.
  22. ^ Oglesby, Cameron (February 10, 2021). "The generational rift over 'intersectional environmentalism'". Grist. Retrieved May 9, 2024.
  23. ^ a b "Policy Drivers for Environmental Justice: What Businesses Need to Know". Blog - Business & Environment - Harvard Business School. Retrieved May 9, 2024.
  24. ^ Geiser, Ken; Waneck, Gerry (July–August 1983). "PCBs and WARREN COUNTY". Science for the People. 15 (4): 13–17.
  25. ^ Atwater, Will (October 20, 2023). "From outliers to luminaries: Warren County's PCB protests get mainstream attention as more communities grapple with environmental justice issues made worse by climate change". North Carolina Health News. Retrieved May 2, 2024.
  26. ^ "From the Archives: Dumping on Warren County | Facing South". www.facingsouth.org. Retrieved May 2, 2024.
  27. ^ a b Weldon, Luci (October 19, 2022). "Podcast provides a closer look at environmental activism in Warren County". The Warren Record. Retrieved May 2, 2024.
  28. ^ a b "The Fight for Survival and the Power of Faith · We Birthed the Movement: The Warren County PCB Landfill Protests, 1978-1982 · UNC Libraries". exhibits.lib.unc.edu. Retrieved May 2, 2024.
  29. ^ "VOICES: Ben Chavis on the environmental justice movement's past and future | Facing South". www.facingsouth.org. Retrieved May 2, 2024.
  30. ^ "A Movement Is Born: Environmental Justice and the UCC". United Church of Christ. Retrieved May 2, 2024.
  31. ^ II, Vann R. Newkirk (January 16, 2016). "Fighting Environmental Racism in North Carolina". The New Yorker. Retrieved May 2, 2024.
  32. ^ Toxic Wastes and Race in the United States: A National Report on the Racial and Socio-economic Characteristics of Communities with Hazardous Waste Sites (PDF) (Report). Commission for Racial Justice, United Church of Christ. 1987.
  33. ^ Perez, Alejandro Colsa (2015). "Evolution of the environmental justice movement: activism, formalization and differentiation". Environmental Research Letters. 10 (10): 105002. Bibcode:2015ERL....10j5002C. doi:10.1088/1748-9326/10/10/105002. S2CID 154368751.
  34. ^ a b c Cole & Foster 2001, p. [page needed].
  35. ^ Britton-Purdy, Jedediah (December 7, 2016). "Environmentalism Was Once a Social-Justice Movement". The Atlantic.
  36. ^ Morrison, Denton (September 1986). "Environmentalism and elitism: a conceptual and empirical analysis". Environmental Management. 10 (5). New York: 581–589. Bibcode:1986EnMan..10..581M. doi:10.1007/BF01866762. S2CID 153561660.
  37. ^ Welch, Kaniqua (November 17, 2021). "30th anniversary of 1st National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit – looking back, looking forward". Kresge Foundation. Retrieved May 2, 2024.
  38. ^ a b Bullard, Robert D (Winter 2002). "Confronting Environmental Racism in the Twenty-First Century". Global Dialogue. 4 (1): 34–48. ProQuest 211519773.
  39. ^ Bullard, Robert (2019). "Addressing Environmental Racism". Journal of International Affairs. 73 (1): 237–242. JSTOR 26872794.
  40. ^ a b "Climate finance justice: International perspectives on climate policy, social justice, and capital". Climatic Change. 161 (2): 243–249. July 2020. Bibcode:2020ClCh..161..243.. doi:10.1007/s10584-020-02790-7.
  41. ^ "Looking Back on Bali - Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung". www.rosalux.de. August 26, 2022. Retrieved May 2, 2024.
  42. ^ a b Adeola, Francis (2001). "Environmental Injustice and Human Rights Abuse: The States, MNCs, and Repression of Minority Groups in the World System". Human Ecology Review. 8 (1): 39–59. JSTOR 24707236.
  43. ^ a b c Busscher, Nienke; Parra, Constanza; Vanclay, Frank (2020). "Environmental justice implications of land grabbing for industrial agriculture and forestry in Argentina". Journal of Environmental Planning and Management. 63 (3): 500–522. Bibcode:2020JEPM...63..500B. doi:10.1080/09640568.2019.1595546. S2CID 159153413.
  44. ^ a b Downey, Liam (November 20, 2010). "Natural Resource Extraction, Armed Violence, and Environmental Degradation". Organization and Environment. 23 (4): 417–445. doi:10.1177/1086026610385903. PMC 3169238. PMID 21909231.
  45. ^ Lerner, Steve (2006). Diamond: A Struggle for Environmental Justice in Louisiana's Chemical Corridor. MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-25018-4.[page needed]
  46. ^ Colquette, Kelly Michelle; Robertson, Elizabeth A Henry (1991). "Environmental Racism: The Causes, Consequences, and Commendations". Tulane Environmental Law Journal. 5 (1): 153–207. JSTOR 43291103.
  47. ^ Skelton, Renee; Miller, Vernice (March 17, 2016). "The Environmental Justice Movement". National Resource Defense Council. Retrieved April 23, 2011.
  48. ^ a b Martinez-Alier, Joan; Shmelev, Stanislav (December 2014). "Between activism and science: grassroots concepts for sustainability coined by Environmental Justice Organizations". Journal of Political Ecology. 21 (1). doi:10.2458/v21i1.21124. hdl:1765/95590.
  49. ^ Pulido, Laura; De Lara, Juan (March 2018). "Reimagining 'justice' in environmental justice: Radical ecologies, decolonial thought, and the Black Radical Tradition". Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space. 1 (1–2): 76–98. Bibcode:2018EnPlE...1...76P. doi:10.1177/2514848618770363. S2CID 149765978.
  50. ^ Pellow, David; Vazin, Jasmine (July 19, 2019). "The Intersection of Race, Immigration Status, and Environmental Justice". Sustainability. 11 (14): 3942. doi:10.3390/su11143942.
  51. ^ Pulido, Laura (August 2017). "Geographies of race and ethnicity II: Environmental racism, racial capitalism and state-sanctioned violence". Progress in Human Geography. 41 (4): 524–533. doi:10.1177/0309132516646495. S2CID 147792869.
  52. ^ Madrigano, Jaime; Calvo Hernandez, Carlos; Stephenson, Scott; Chari, Ramya; Gahlon, Grace; Huttinger, Alexandra; Siddiqi, Sameer M.; Preston, Benjamin L. (August 23, 2021). "Environmental Racism: The Relationship Between Historical Residential Redlining and Current Environmental Hazards". ISEE Conference Abstracts. 2021 (1). doi:10.1289/isee.2021.O-LT-061.
  53. ^ Álvarez, L.; Coolsaet, B (2020). "Decolonizing environmental justice studies: a Latin American perspective". Capitalism Nature Socialism. 31 (2): 50–69. doi:10.1080/10455752.2018.1558272. S2CID 150320682.
  54. ^ Rodríguez, I.; Inturias, M. L (2018). "Conflict transformation in indigenous peoples' territories: doing environmental justice with a 'decolonial turn'". Development Studies Research. 5 (1): 90–105. doi:10.1080/21665095.2018.1486220. S2CID 67823020.
  55. ^ Clapp, Jennifer (2002). "The Distancing of Waste: Overconsumption in a Global Economy". Confronting Consumption. pp. 155–176. doi:10.7551/mitpress/2097.003.0010. ISBN 978-0-262-28192-8.
  56. ^ a b c Pellow 2007, p. [page needed].
  57. ^ Park, Rozelia (April 1998). "An Examination of International Environmental Racism Through the Lens of Transboundary Movement of Hazardous Wastes". Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies. 5 (2).
  58. ^ Cunningham, William P & Mary A (2004). Principles of Environmental Science. McGrw-Hill Further Education. p. Chapter 13, Further Case Studies. ISBN 0072919833.
  59. ^ Glade, Sara; Ray, Isha (April 2022). "Safe drinking water for small low-income communities: the long road from violation to remediation". Environmental Research Letters. 17 (4): 044008. Bibcode:2022ERL....17d4008G. doi:10.1088/1748-9326/ac58aa.
  60. ^ Duignan, Sarah; Moffat, Tina; Martin-Hill, Dawn (October 27, 2020). "Using Boundary Objects to Co-Create Community Health and Water Knowledge with Community-Based Medical Anthropology and Indigenous Knowledge". Engaged Scholar Journal: Community-Engaged Research, Teaching, and Learning. 6 (1): 49–76. doi:10.15402/esj.v6i1.68178.
  61. ^ a b Eichhorn, S. J. (2022). "Resource extraction as a tool of racism in West Papua". The International Journal of Human Rights. 27 (6): 994–1016. doi:10.1080/13642987.2022.2036722. hdl:1983/1ee30efe-5b84-4078-947a-07fb063ce883. S2CID 247094198.
  62. ^ Reclaiming Power and Place: The Final Report of the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (PDF) (Report). Vol. 1a. p. 728. ISBN 978-0-660-29274-8. CP32-163/2-1-2019E-PDF
  63. ^ "Mapping Environmental Justice". EJAtlas.
  64. ^ a b Dorninger, Christian; Hornborg, Alf; Abson, David J.; von Wehrden, Henrik; Schaffartzik, Anke; Giljum, Stefan; Engler, John-Oliver; Feller, Robert L.; Hubacek, Klaus; Wieland, Hanspeter (January 2021). "Global patterns of ecologically unequal exchange: Implications for sustainability in the 21st century" (PDF). Ecological Economics. 179: 106824. Bibcode:2021EcoEc.17906824D. doi:10.1016/j.ecolecon.2020.106824. S2CID 224844527.
  65. ^ Hickel, Jason; Dorninger, Christian; Wieland, Hanspeter; Suwandi, Intan (March 2022). "Imperialist appropriation in the world economy: Drain from the global South through unequal exchange, 1990–2015". Global Environmental Change. 73: 102467. doi:10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2022.102467. S2CID 246855421.
  66. ^ Hickel, Jason; Sullivan, Dylan; Zoomkawala, Huzaifa (November 2, 2021). "Plunder in the Post-Colonial Era: Quantifying Drain from the Global South Through Unequal Exchange, 1960–2018". New Political Economy. 26 (6): 1030–1047. doi:10.1080/13563467.2021.1899153. S2CID 233600773.
  67. ^ Hickel, J. (2020). "Quantifying national responsibility for climate breakdown: an equality-based attribution approach for carbon dioxide emissions in excess of the planetary boundary". The Lancet Planetary Health. 4 (9): e399–e404. doi:10.1016/S2542-5196(20)30196-0. PMID 32918885. S2CID 221643616.
  68. ^ Collins, Mary B; Munoz, Ian; JaJa, Joseph (January 1, 2016). "Linking 'toxic outliers' to environmental justice communities". Environmental Research Letters. 11 (1): 015004. Bibcode:2016ERL....11a5004C. doi:10.1088/1748-9326/11/1/015004. S2CID 11839990.
  69. ^ a b c d Gochfeld, Michael; Burger, Joanna (December 2011). "Disproportionate Exposures in Environmental Justice and Other Populations: The Importance of Outliers". American Journal of Public Health. 101 (S1): S53–S63. doi:10.2105/ajph.2011.300121. PMC 3222496. PMID 21551384.
  70. ^ a b c Bick, Rachel; Halsey, Erika; Ekenga, Christine C. (December 2018). "The global environmental injustice of fast fashion". Environmental Health. 17 (1): 92. Bibcode:2018EnvHe..17...92B. doi:10.1186/s12940-018-0433-7. PMC 6307129. PMID 30591057.
  71. ^ a b c Buckingham, Susan; Kulcur, Rakibe (September 2009). "Gendered Geographies of Environmental Injustice". Antipode. 41 (4): 659–683. Bibcode:2009Antip..41..659B. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8330.2009.00693.x.
  72. ^ Brulle, Robert J.; Pellow, David N. (April 2006). "ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE: Human Health and Environmental Inequalities". Annual Review of Public Health. 27 (1): 103–124. doi:10.1146/annurev.publhealth.27.021405.102124. PMID 16533111.
  73. ^ Kennedy, Amanda; Schafft, Kai A.; Howard, Tanya M. (August 3, 2017). "Taking away David's sling: environmental justice and land-use conflict in extractive resource development". Local Environment. 22 (8): 952–968. Bibcode:2017LoEnv..22..952K. doi:10.1080/13549839.2017.1309369. S2CID 157888833.
  74. ^ Jeffries, Elisabeth. "What price environmental justice?". Archived from the original on August 7, 2011. Retrieved April 24, 2011.
  75. ^ "Cost Barriers to Environmental Justice". Retrieved April 24, 2011.
  76. ^ a b United Nations Environment Programme (2020). Emissions Gap Report 2020 - Executive Summary (Report). p. XV Fig. ES.8.
  77. ^ a b Cozzi, Laura; Chen, Olivia; Kim, Hyeji (February 22, 2023). "The world's top 1% of emitters produce over 1000 times more CO2 than the bottom 1%". iea.org. International Energy Agency (IEA). Archived from the original on March 3, 2023. "Methodological note: ... The analysis accounts for energy-related CO2, and not other greenhouse gases, nor those related to land use and agriculture."
  78. ^ Stevens, Harry (March 1, 2023). "The United States has caused the most global warming. When will China pass it?". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on March 1, 2023.
  79. ^ a b c Reckien, Diana; Lwasa, Shuaib; Satterthwaite, David; McEvoy, Darryn; Creutzig, Felix; Montgomery, Mark; Schensul, Daniel; Balk, Deborah; Khan, Iqbal Alam; Fernandez, Blanca; Brown, Donald; Osorio, Juan Camilo; Tovar-Restrepo, Marcela; De Sherbinin, Alex; Feringa, Wim; Sverdlik, Alice; Porio, Emma; Nair, Abhishek; McCormick, Sabrina; Bautista, Eddie (2018). "Equity, Environmental Justice, and Urban Climate Change". Climate Change and Cities. pp. 173–224. doi:10.1017/9781316563878.013. ISBN 978-1-316-56387-8.
  80. ^ a b Haines, Andy (January 7, 2004). "Health Effects of Climate Change" (PDF). JAMA. 291 (1): 99–103. doi:10.1001/jama.291.1.99. PMID 14709582.
  81. ^ a b Moellendorf, Darrel (March 2015). "Climate Change Justice". Philosophy Compass. 10 (3): 173–186. doi:10.1111/phc3.12201.
  82. ^ UN-Water. "Quality and Wastewater". UN-Water. Retrieved August 29, 2022.
  83. ^ "Wastewater resource recovery can fix water insecurity and cut carbon emissions". European Investment Bank. Retrieved August 29, 2022.
  84. ^ "Water and Sanitation - United Nations Sustainable Development". www.un.org. Retrieved August 29, 2022.
  85. ^ Schlosberg, David; Collins, Lisette B. (May 2014). "From environmental to climate justice: climate change and the discourse of environmental justice". WIREs Climate Change. 5 (3): 359–374. Bibcode:2014WIRCC...5..359S. doi:10.1002/wcc.275. S2CID 145546565.
  86. ^ BETH, GARDINER. "Ocean Justice: Where Social Equity and the Climate Fight Intersect". Yale Environment 360. Retrieved December 18, 2023.
  87. ^ Rice, Doyle; Voyles Pulver, Dinah (December 7, 2023). "Biden Administration announces first-ever Ocean Justice Strategy. What's that?". USA today. Retrieved December 18, 2023.
  88. ^ OCEAN JUSTICE STRATEGY (PDF). OCEAN POLICY COMMITTEE. December 2023. p. 23. Retrieved December 18, 2023.
  89. ^ a b Pezzullo, Phaedra C.; Sandler, Ronald (2007). "Introduction: Revisiting the Environmental Justice Challenge to Environmentalism". Environmental Justice and Environmentalism. pp. 1–24. doi:10.7551/mitpress/2781.003.0003. ISBN 978-0-262-28291-8.
  90. ^ "Environmentalism vs. Environmental Justice | Sustainability | UMN Duluth". sustainability.d.umn.edu. Retrieved June 25, 2022.
  91. ^ Ross, Loretta (2007). Reproductive Justice Briefing Book; A Primer on Reproductive Justice and Social Change. Berkeley, California: Berkeley Law. pp. 4–5.
  92. ^ Hoover, Elizabeth (2017). The River is In Us: Fighting Toxics in a Mohawk Community. Minneapolis, Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 9781517903039.
  93. ^ Sillman, Jael (2016). Undivided Rights, Women of Color Organize for Reproductive Justice. Chicago, Illinois: Haymarket Books. p. 126. ISBN 9781608466177.
  94. ^ Buckingham, Susan (2015). "Ecofeminism". International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences. pp. 845–850. doi:10.1016/B978-0-08-097086-8.91020-1. ISBN 978-0-08-097087-5.
  95. ^ a b Kirk, Gwyn (1997). "Ecofeminism and Environmental Justice: Bridges across Gender, Race, and Class". Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies. 18 (2): 2–20. doi:10.2307/3346962. JSTOR 3346962.
  96. ^ Sturgeon, Noël (July 1999). "Ecofeminist appropriations and transnational environmentalisms". Identities. 6 (2–3): 255–279. doi:10.1080/1070289X.1999.9962645.
  97. ^ "Five steps to environmental justice | United Nations Development Programme". UNDP. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  98. ^ Muigua, K., & Kariuki, F. (2015). Towards Environmental Justice in Kenya. http://kmco.co.ke/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Towards-Environmental-Justice-in-Kenya-1st-September-2017.pdf
  99. ^ "UNPO: Ogoni: Niger Delta Bears Brunt after Fifty Years of Oil Spills". unpo.org. November 2, 2009. Retrieved November 13, 2022.
  100. ^ Vidal, John (May 29, 2010). "Nigeria's agony dwarfs the Gulf oil spill. The US and Europe ignore it". The Observer.
  101. ^ a b "Nigeria, The Ogoni Crisis, Vol. 7, No. 5". Human Rights Watch. July 1995. Retrieved December 15, 2014.
  102. ^ a b Osaghae, Eghosa E. (1995). "The Ogoni Uprising: Oil Politics, Minority Agitation and the Future of the Nigerian State". African Affairs. 94 (376): 325–344. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.afraf.a098833. JSTOR 723402.
  103. ^ a b Agbonifo, John (2009). "Oil, Insecurity, and Subversive Patriots in the Niger Delta: The Ogoni as Agent of Revolutionary Change". Journal of Third World Studies. 26 (2): 71–106. JSTOR 45194563.
  104. ^ Spitulnik, Debra (2011). "Small Media Against Big Oil (Nigeria)". In Downing, John D. H. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Social Movement Media. SAGE. p. 459. ISBN 978-0-7619-2688-7.
  105. ^ a b c d McDonald 2002, p. [page needed].
  106. ^ Simons, H. J. (July 1961). "Death in South African mines". Africa South. 5 (4): 41–55. Retrieved January 22, 2020.
  107. ^ Garthwaite (April 22, 2019). "Climate change has worsened global economic inequality". Earth.Stanford.edu. Retrieved April 22, 2019.
  108. ^ Diffenbaugh, N.; Burke, M. (2019). "Global warming has increased global economic inequality". PNAS. 116 (20): 9808–9813. Bibcode:2019PNAS..116.9808D. doi:10.1073/pnas.1816020116. PMC 6525504. PMID 31010922.
  109. ^ a b c Pearce, Fred (April 17, 2018). "How a 'Toxic Cocktail' Is Posing a Troubling Health Risk in China's Cities". Yale E360.
  110. ^ Kao, Ernest (October 2, 2018). "1 million dead and US$38 billion lost: the price of China's air pollution". South China Morning Post.
  111. ^ Aspinall, Edward (2007). "The Construction of Grievance: Natural Resources and Identity in a Separatist Conflict". The Journal of Conflict Resolution. 51 (6): 950–972. doi:10.1177/0022002707307120. hdl:1885/29992. JSTOR 27638587. S2CID 145677680.
  112. ^ Arcioni, Elisa; Mitchell, Glenn (June 2005). "Environmental Justice in Australia: When the RATS Became IRATE". Environmental Politics. 14 (3): 363–379. Bibcode:2005EnvPo..14..363A. doi:10.1080/09644010500087590.
  113. ^ "Radioactive waste and the nuclear war on Australia's Aboriginal people". theecologist.org. July 2016. Retrieved February 6, 2023.
  114. ^ Vachette, Astrid; Gulliver, Robyn; Boddington, Sarah (September 19, 2023). "Climate Justice: What does it mean?". The Commons Social Change Library. Retrieved July 8, 2024.
  115. ^ EJAtlas; ICTA-UAB; Mathies, Louisa (March 18, 2020). "WestConnex Highway Project, Sydney and NSW, Australia | EJAtlas". Environmental Justice Atlas. Retrieved May 18, 2023.
  116. ^ Hanaček, Ksenija; ICTA-UAB (December 8, 2019). "A decade longe battle against Yeelirrie uranium mine led by Tjiwarl women, Australia | EJAtlas". Environmental Justice Atlas. Retrieved May 18, 2023.
  117. ^ Commons Librarian (December 22, 2023). "Campaigns that Changed the Northern Territory". The Commons Social Change Library. Retrieved July 8, 2024.
  118. ^ EJAtlas Team (M.L) (July 13, 2022). "Santos' Barossa offshore gas "scraping the bottom of the barrel" in Timor Sea, NT, Australia | EJAtlas". Environmental Justice Atlas. Retrieved May 18, 2023.
  119. ^ a b Ganzleben, Catherine; Kazmierczak, Aleksandra (December 2020). "Leaving no one behind – understanding environmental inequality in Europe". Environmental Health. 19 (1): 57. Bibcode:2020EnvHe..19...57G. doi:10.1186/s12940-020-00600-2. PMC 7251658. PMID 32460849.
  120. ^ a b Steger, Tamara; Filcak, Richard (March 2008). "Articulating the Basis for Promoting Environmental Justice in Central and Eastern Europe". Environmental Justice. 1 (1): 49–53. doi:10.1089/env.2008.0501.
  121. ^ Hayes, Wayland J. (June 1969). "Sweden Bans DDT". Archives of Environmental Health. 18 (6): 872. doi:10.1080/00039896.1969.10665507.
  122. ^ Breton, Mary Joy (February 1, 2016). Women Pioneers For The Environment. Northeastern University Press. ISBN 9781555538552.
  123. ^ Merchant, Carolyn (2012). "Ecofeminism". Radical Ecology. pp. 193–222. doi:10.4324/9780203084212. ISBN 978-1-136-19015-5. p. 193: In Sweden, feminists prepare jam from berries sprayed with herbicides and offer a taste to members of parliament: they refuse.
  124. ^ Environmental justice: Rights and means to a healthy environment for all (PDF), ESRC Global Environmental Change Programme
  125. ^ "About Us". Environmental Justice Foundation. Archived from the original on September 7, 2012. Retrieved November 6, 2012.
  126. ^ "Pirate fishing causing eco disaster and killing communities, says report" The Guardian, June 8, 2009, retrieved 8 October 2009
  127. ^ EJF. 2005. Pirates and Profiteers: How Pirate Fishing Fleets are Robbing People and Oceans. Environmental Justice Foundation, London, UK
  128. ^ "Cotton in Uzbekistan". Environmental Justice Foundation. Archived from the original on April 10, 2010. Retrieved October 8, 2009.
  129. ^ Mathiason, Nick (May 24, 2009). "Uzbekistan forced to stop child labor". The Observer. Retrieved May 14, 2016.
  130. ^ EJOLT. "Offshore Oil drilling, Belize | EJAtlas". Environmental Justice Atlas. Retrieved May 6, 2023.
  131. ^ Chavez, Patricio; Global Campaign to Dismantle Corporate Power; Martinez-Alier, Joan; Transnational Institute - TNI (February 14, 2022). "Pacific Rim at El Dorado mine, El Salvador | EJAtlas". Environmental Justice Atlas. Retrieved May 18, 2023.
  132. ^ "https://". Global Witness. Retrieved May 6, 2023.
  133. ^ Neotrópica, Fundación (August 18, 2019). "Interoceanic Grand Canal project, Nicaragua | EJAtlas". Environmental Justice Atlas. Retrieved May 18, 2023.
  134. ^ Downey, Liam (May 2005). "Assessing Environmental Inequality: How the Conclusions We Draw Vary According to the Definitions We Employ". Sociological Spectrum. 25 (3): 349–369. doi:10.1080/027321790518870. PMC 3162366. PMID 21874079.
  135. ^ Pastor, Manuel (2001). Racial/ethnic Inequality in Environmental-hazard Exposure in Metropolitan Los Angeles. Policy Research Program, California Policy Research Center. OCLC 47019125.[page needed]
  136. ^ Michael Ash. "Justice in the Air: Tracking Toxic Pollution from America's Industries and Companies to Our States, Cities, and Neighborhoods". Archived from the original on July 25, 2011. Retrieved May 12, 2011.
  137. ^ Sandler, Ronald D.; Pezzullo, Phaedra C. (2007). Environmental Justice and Environmentalism: The Social Justice Challenge to the Environmental Movement. MIT Press. pp. 57–83. ISBN 978-0-262-19552-2.
  138. ^ Range Resources exec's well-site remarks drawing sharp criticism: Does Range avoid rich neighborhoods?Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (April 18, 2016)
  139. ^ "Petrochemical Industry in East Bay North Coast Refinery Corridor". FracTracker Alliance. March 30, 2016. Retrieved March 18, 2017.
  140. ^ "What is the Superfund?". Duwamish River Community Coalition. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  141. ^ "River For All". Duwamish River Community Coalition. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  142. ^ "Environmental racism in Louisiana's 'Cancer Alley', must end, say UN human rights experts". UN News. March 2, 2021. Retrieved June 30, 2022.
  143. ^ James, Wesley (2012). "Uneven magnitude of disparities in cancer risks from air toxins". International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 9 (12): 4365–4385. doi:10.3390/ijerph9124365. PMC 3546767. PMID 23208297.
  144. ^ a b c Shrader-Frechette, Kristin (2002). Environmental Justice. doi:10.1093/0195152034.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-515203-6.[page needed]
  145. ^ Alfieri, Anthony V. (2014). "Paternalistic Interventions in Civil Rights and Poverty Law: A Case Study of Environmental Justice". Michigan Law Review. 112 (6): 1157–1177. JSTOR 23813069. SSRN 2354382. ProQuest 1522269740.
  146. ^ Salas, Renee N. (September 9, 2021). "Environmental Racism and Climate Change — Missed Diagnoses". New England Journal of Medicine. 385 (11): 967–969. doi:10.1056/NEJMp2109160. PMID 34407333.
  147. ^ a b Johansen, Bruce E. (Bruce Elliott) (2002). "The Inuit's Struggle with Dioxins and Other Organic Pollutants". The American Indian Quarterly. 26 (3): 479–490. doi:10.1353/aiq.2003.0041.
  148. ^ Montano, Luigi; Pironti, Concetta; Pinto, Gabriella; Ricciardi, Maria; Buono, Amalia; Brogna, Carlo; Venier, Marta; Piscopo, Marina; Amoresano, Angela; Motta, Oriana (July 2022). "Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs) in the Environment: Occupational and Exposure Events, Effects on Human Health and Fertility". Toxics. 10 (7): 365. doi:10.3390/toxics10070365. PMC 9323099. PMID 35878270.
  149. ^ Endosulfan - a Deadly Chemical Archived February 19, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  150. ^ Bullard, Robert D.; Johnson, Glenn S. (January 2000). "Environmentalism and Public Policy: Environmental Justice: Grassroots Activism and Its Impact on Public Policy Decision Making". Journal of Social Issues. 56 (3): 555–578. doi:10.1111/0022-4537.00184.
  151. ^ Noor, Dharna (June 12, 2023). "Young Montana residents bring climate change case to court for first time ever". The Guardian. Archived from the original on June 12, 2023.
  152. ^ Uyeda, Ray Levy (April 13, 2022). "Fossil fuels v our future: young Montanans wage historic climate fight". The Guardian. Archived from the original on March 10, 2023.
  153. ^ "The Constitution of the State of Montana" (PDF). courts.mt.gov. Montana Judicial Branch. March 22, 1972. Archived (PDF) from the original on May 28, 2023.
  154. ^ Gelles, David (March 24, 2023). "In Montana, It's Youth vs. the State in a Landmark Climate Case". The New York Times. Archived from the original on June 14, 2023.
  155. ^ Hanson, Amy Beth; Brown, Matthew (August 14, 2023). "Young environmental activists prevail in first-of-its-kind climate change trial in Montana". AP News. Archived from the original on August 17, 2023.
  156. ^ Brown, Matthew; Hanson, Amy Beth (July 10, 2024). "Republicans urge reversal of landmark ruling in Montana climate change lawsuit by young plaintiffs". AP News. Archived from the original on July 11, 2024.
  157. ^ "Defending Tomorrow". Global Witness. Retrieved May 6, 2023.
  158. ^ EJOLT. "Bajo la Alumbrera mine, Catamarca, Argentina | EJAtlas". Environmental Justice Atlas. Retrieved May 6, 2023.
  159. ^ EJOLT. "Belo Monte hydroelectric dam, Para, Brasil | EJAtlas". Environmental Justice Atlas. Retrieved May 6, 2023.
  160. ^ a b Davidov, V (2010). "Aguinda v. Texaco Inc.: Expanding Indigenous "Expertise" Beyond Ecoprimitivism". Journal of Legal Anthropology. 1 (2): 147–164. doi:10.3167/jla.2010.010201. S2CID 158703832.
  161. ^ García, R., J. Miyashiro, C. Orejón and F. Pizarro (2014) Crecimiento urbano, cambio climático y ecosistemas frágiles: el caso de las lomas de Villa María del Triunfo en Lima Sur. Lima. Available online at: http://urbano.org.pe/descargas/investigaciones/PERU-HOY/PH-2014.pdf
  162. ^ Surma, Katie (March 29, 2024). "International Court Issues First-Ever Decision Enforcing the Right to a Healthy Environment". Inside Climate News. Archived from the original on April 6, 2024.
  163. ^ "Basel Action Network". BAN. Retrieved November 6, 2012.
  164. ^ "Environmental Justice Organisations, Liabilities and Trade". EJOLT. Retrieved November 6, 2012.
  165. ^ "Health Care Without Harm". noharm.org.
  166. ^ "Pesticide Action Network - Reclaiming the future of food and farming". www.panna.org.
  167. ^ a b c Environment, U. N. (May 19, 2018). "Global Gender and Environment Outlook (GGEO)". UNEP - UN Environment Programme. Retrieved May 11, 2022.
  168. ^ a b "Women at the frontline of climate change: gender risks and hopes". UNW WRD Knowledge Hub. Retrieved May 11, 2022.
  169. ^ a b Zein-Elabdin, Eiman (December 1996). "Development, Gender, and the Environment: Theoretical or Contextual Link? Toward an Institutional Analysis of Gender". Journal of Economic Issues. 30 (4): 929–947. doi:10.1080/00213624.1996.11505859.
  170. ^ Hoover, Elizabeth (2017). The River Is in Us: Fighting Toxics in a Mohawk Community. University of Minnesota Press. doi:10.5749/j.ctt1pwt6mk. ISBN 978-1-5179-0303-9. JSTOR 10.5749/j.ctt1pwt6mk.[page needed]
  171. ^ Whyte, Kyle Powys (2014). "Indigenous Women, Climate Change Impacts, and Collective Action". Hypatia. 29 (3): 599–616. doi:10.1111/hypa.12089.
  172. ^ "Report of the International Indigenous Women's Environmental and Reproductive Health Symposium" (PDF). 2012.
  173. ^ Rim, Kyung-Taek (June 2017). "Reproductive Toxic Chemicals at Work and Efforts to Protect Workers' Health: A Literature Review". Safety and Health at Work. 8 (2): 143–150. doi:10.1016/j.shaw.2017.04.003. PMC 5447413. PMID 28593069.
  174. ^ Baden, Sally; Goetz, Anne Marie (July 1997). "Who Needs [Sex] When you can have [Gender]?: Conflicting Discourses on Gender at Beijing". Feminist Review. 56 (1): 3–25. doi:10.1057/fr.1997.13.
  175. ^ Gorman, A. (2005). "The cultural landscape of interplanetary space". Journal of Social Archaeology. 5 (1): 85–107. doi:10.1177/1469605305050148. S2CID 144152006.
  176. ^ a b c d Klinger, J.M. (2021). "Environmental Geopolitics and Outer Space". Geopolitics. 26 (3): 666–703. doi:10.1080/14650045.2019.1590340. S2CID 150443847.
  177. ^ Olson, V.A. (2012). "Political ecology in the extreme: Asteroid activism and the making of an environmental solar system". Anthropological Quarterly. 85 (4): 1027–44. doi:10.1353/anq.2012.0070. S2CID 143560250.
  178. ^ Swyngedouw, E. (2011). "Interrogating post-democratization: Reclaiming egalitarian political spaces". Political Geography. 30 (7): 370–380. doi:10.1016/j.polgeo.2011.08.001.
  179. ^ Castree, Noel (2003). "The Geopolitics of Nature". A Companion to Political Geography. pp. 421–439. doi:10.1002/9780470998946.ch27. ISBN 978-0-631-22031-2.
  180. ^ Dunnett, O.; Maclaren, A.; Klinger, J.; Lane, K.; Sage, D. (2019). "Geographies of outer space: Progress and new opportunities". Progress in Human Geography. 43 (2): 314–336. doi:10.1177/0309132517747727. hdl:2164/11959. S2CID 149382358.
  181. ^ Redfield, P. (2001). Space in the tropics: From convicts to rockets in French Guiana. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-92342-3.[page needed]
  182. ^ a b Klinger 2017, p. [page needed].
  183. ^ Marion, G.M.; Black, C.H.; Zedler, P.H. (1989). "The effect of extreme HCL deposition on soil acid neutralization following simulated shuttle rocket launches". Water, Air, and Soil Pollution. 43 (3–4): 345–363. Bibcode:1989WASP...43..345M. doi:10.1007/BF00279201. S2CID 92352489.
  184. ^ Carslaw, K.; Wirth, M.; Tsias, A.; Luo, B.; Dornbrack, A.; Leutbecher, M.; Volkert, H.; Renger, W.; Bacmeister, J.; Peter, T. (1998). "Particle microphysics and chemistry in remotely observed mountain polar stratospheric clouds" (PDF). Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres. 103 (D5): 5785–5796. Bibcode:1998JGR...103.5785C. doi:10.1029/97JD03626.
  185. ^ Perlwitz, J.; Pawson, S.; Fogt, R.; Nielsen, J.; Neff, W. (2008). "Impact of stratospheric ozone hole recovery on Antarctic climate". Geophysical Research Letters. 35 (8): L08714-n/a. Bibcode:2008GeoRL..35.8714P. doi:10.1029/2008GL033317. S2CID 129582603.
  186. ^ Kolumbayeva, S.; Begimbetova, D.; Shalakhmetova, T.; Saliev, T.; Lovinskaya, A.; Zhunusbekova, B. (2014). "Chromosomal instability in rodents caused by pollution from Baikonur cosmodrome". Ecotoxicology. 23 (7): 1283–1291. Bibcode:2014Ecotx..23.1283K. doi:10.1007/s10646-014-1271-1. PMID 24990120. S2CID 23785137.
  187. ^ Gabrys, J. (2016). Program earth: The making of a computational planet. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 9780816693146.
  188. ^ Rothe, D.; Shim, D. (2018). "Sensing the ground: On the global politics of satellite-based activism". Review of International Studies. 44 (3): 414–437. doi:10.1017/S0260210517000602. S2CID 148578610.

Sources cited

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • Sandler, Ronald D.; Pezzullo, Phaedra C. (2007). Environmental Justice and Environmentalism: The Social Justice Challenge to the Environmental Movement. MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-19552-2.
  • Shiva, Vandana (2008). Soil Not Oil: Environmental Justice in a Time of Climate Crisis. South End Press. ISBN 978-0-89608-782-8.
  • Taylor, Dorceta E. (2016). The Rise of the American Conservation Movement: Power, Privilege, and Environmental Protection. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-7397-1.
  • White, Robert (2004). Controversies in Environmental Sociology. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-45123-9.
  • Zehner, Ozzie (2012). Green Illusions: The Dirty Secrets of Clean Energy and the Future of Environmentalism. U of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-4336-1.

Primary sources

[edit]
  • Wells, Christopher W. (2018). Environmental Justice in Postwar America: A Documentary Reader. University of Washington Press. ISBN 978-0-295-74369-1.

Interviews

[edit]
[edit]