EJ and race
Forms of justice
EJ communities
Important concepts
EJ case studies
100

Racial discrimination in environmental policy-making and enforcement of regulations and laws, the deliberate targeting of communities of color for toxic waste facilities, the official sanctioning of the presence of life threatening poisons and pollutants for communities of color, and the history of excluding people of color from leadership of the environmental movement

What is environmental racism

100

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

What is environmental justice

100

Designation of communities marginalized by underinvestment and overburdened by pollution, commonly characterized by meeting certain geographic, socioeconomic, public health, and environmental hazard criteria

What is a disadvantaged community

100

An organized effort by a large number of people to bring about or impede social, political, economic, or cultural change, typically working outside the system

What is a social movement

100

Signed into law August 2022, this US act authorized investment of $369 billion in energy security and climate projects, with an estimated $47.5 billion for EJ priorities

What is the Inflation Reduction Act

200

“a concept which signifies and symbolizes social conflicts and interests by referring to different types of human bodies” (Omi and Winant 1994:55)

What is race

200

The right to equal treatment, that is, to the same distribution of goods and opportunities as anyone else has or is given

What is distributive justice

200

Poorer health outcomes such as increased rates of asthma, cancer, and neurodevelopmental issues, due to chronic exposure to toxic chemicals, polluted air, and water compared to the average

What is a health disparity

200

An explicit theory of how and why it is thought that a social policy or program activities lead to outcomes and impacts

What is a theory of change

200

A public health crisis from 2014 to 2019 which involved the drinking water for the city being contaminated with lead. Officials failed to apply corrosion inhibitors to the water, which resulted in lead from aging pipes leaching into the water supply, exposing around 100,000 residents to elevated lead levels.

What is the water crisis in Flint, Michigan

300

A framework for understanding how various aspects of a person's identity, such as race, gender, class, and sexuality, interact to create unique experiences of both discrimination and privilege

What is intersectionality

300

The right to treatment as an equal. That is the right, not to an equal distribution of some good or opportunity, but to equal concern and respect in the political decision about how these goods and opportunities are to be distributed

What is procedural justice

300

The total burden – positive, neutral, or negative – from chemical and non-chemical stressors and their interactions that affect the health, well-being, and quality of life of an individual, community, or population at a given point in time or over a period of time

What is cumulative burden

300

Research that documents pain or loss in an individual, community, or tribe, and looks to historical exploitation, domination, and colonization to explain contemporary brokenness, such as poverty, poor health, and low literacy

What is damage-centered research

300

Congo, Namibia, Tanzania, Zambia - all with high levels of economic inequality and poor democratic institutions - setting aside more than 30% of national territories exclusively for wildlife and biodiversity conservation is an example of

What is fortress conservation

400

The normalization and legitimization of an array of dynamics – historical, cultural, institutional and interpersonal – that routinely advantage whites while producing cumulative and chronic adverse outcomes for people of color

What is structural racism

400

Fairness in how damages are addressed, and punishments for lawbreaking are assigned; not only about punishment, but the duty to repair losses for which one is responsible

What is corrective justice

400

When communities of concern (1) experience higher levels of exposure to environmental stressors in terms of both frequency and magnitude and (2) are less able to deal with these hazards as a result of limited knowledge of exposures and disenfranchisement from the political process

What is double jeopardy

400

Doing research with an equal and reciprocal partnership involving: stakeholder interaction and engagement, collaboration, multiple values and perspectives, commitment, iterative process, joint problem/definition, etc.

Co-production of research

400

In 1996, this company wanted to build a new polyvinyl chloride (PVC) plant in the lower income, 84% African-American community of Convent, Louisiana. EPA did an analysis and found that African Americans would suffer at 71% to 242% greater toxic air pollution burden than non-African Americans.

What is Shintech

500

Discriminatory treatment, unfair policies and inequitable opportunities and impacts, based on race, produced and perpetuated by schools, mass media, etc., is an example of this

What is institutional racism

500

The requirement that policies and programs must meet the standard of fairly considering and representing the cultures, values, and situations of all affected parties

What is recognitive justice

500

‘a 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’ - Nixon (2011)

What is slow violence

500

Guidance for (mostly white) environmental organizations who want to work in low income and communities of color: #1 Be Inclusive, #2 Emphasis on Bottom-Up Organizing, #3 Let People Speak for Themselves, #4 Work Together In Solidarity and Mutuality, #5 Build Just Relationships Among Ourselves, #6 Commitment to Self-Transformation

What are the Jemez Principles

500

In 1978, Ward Transformer Company drove liquid tanker trucks along rural roads and discharged PCBs. Because it was state-owned property, the state was responsible for remediation and planned a landfill in a rural area of mostly poor, Black residents. Residents of this county spent three years fighting this in courts and in 1982 turned to collective action

What is Warren County

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