Adams, John A. 1992. "The Mainstream Environmental Movement: Predominantly White Memberships Are Not Defensible." EPA Journal, 18(I): 25-27.
Almeida, Paul. 1994. "The Network for Environmental and Economic Justice in the Southwest: Interview with Richard Moore." Capitalism, Nature, Socialism, 5(I)(March): 21-54.
Alston, Dana. 1992. "Transforming a Movement: People of Color Unite at Summit against Environmental Racism." Soujourners, 21(January): 30-31.
______. 1991. "Black, Brown, Poor and Poisoned: Minority Grassroots Environmentalism and the Quest for Eco-Justice." Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy, 68.
______. (ed.). 1990. We Speak for Ourselves: Social Justice, Race and Environment. Washington: Panos Institute.
Alternative Policy Institute of the Center for Third World Organizing. 1986. Toxics and Minority Communties: Issue PAC #2. Oakland, CA: Center for Third World Organizing.
Anderson, J.D. 1986. "US Population Distibution and the Location of Hazardous Waste Sites." Paper presented at the Population Association of America Annual Meeting, (April).
Angel, Bradley. 1991. Toxic Threat to Indian Lands: A greenpeace Report. San Francisco: Greenpeace.
Anthony, Carl. 1992. "Rebuild the Cities." (Urban reconstuction) (Includes related article). Earth Island Journal, 7(4)(Fall):44.
Bailey, Conner, Charles E. Faupel and James H. Gundlach. 1993. "Environmental Politics in Alabama's Blackbelt." In: robert Bullard (ed.), Confronting Environment Racism: Voices form the Grassroots. Boston: South End Press. pp. 107-122.
Bailey, Conner and Charles E. Faupel. 1993. "Environmental Justice: Mobilization of a Social Movement." Professional Agricultural Workers Conference, Tuskegee University, December 5-6, 1992. pp.51-60.
Bullard, Robert D. 1994. Unequal Protection: Environmental Jastice and Communities of Color. San Francisco: Sierra Club Press.
______. 1993a. "The Threat of Enviornmental Racism." Natural Resources and Environment, 7(3): 23-26, 55-56.
______. 1993b. Confronting Environmental Racism: Voices from the Grassroots. South End Press, Boston, MA.
______. 1992. "Politics of Race and Pollution." Multinational Monitor (June): 22-25.
______. 1990a. "Ecological Inequities and the New South: Black Communities Under Siege." Journal of Ethnic Studies, 17(4): 101-115.
______. 1990b. Dumping in Dixie: Race, Class, and Environmental Quality. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
______. 1983. "Solid Waste Sites and the Black Houston community." Social Inquiry, 53: 273-288.
Bullard, Robert D. and Beverly H. Wright. 1990. "The Quest for Environmental Equity: Mobilizing the African-American Community for Social Change." Society and Natural Resources, 3:301-311.
______. 1987a. "Blacks and the Environment." Humboldt Journal of Social Relations, 14: 165-84.
______. 1987b. "Environmentalism and the Politics of Equity: Emergent Trends in the Black Community." Md-America Reciew of Sociology, 12:21-37.
______. 1986. "The Politics fo Pollution: Implications for the Black Community." Phylon, 47(1): 71-78.
Chase, A.R. 1993. "Assessing and Addressing Problems Posed by Environmental Racism." Rutgers Law Review, 45(2) (Winter): 335-369.
Churchill, Ward. 1993. Stuggle for the Land: Indigenous Resistance to Genocide, Ecocide, and Expropriation in Contemporary North America. Monroe, ME: Common Courage Press.
Cole, Luke W. 1992a. Remedies for Enviornmental Racism: A View From the Field. (Response to Rachel D. Godsil, Michigan Law Review, vol. 90, p. 394). Michigan Law Review, 90(7)(June): 1991-1997.
______. 1992b. "Empowerment as the Key to Enviornmental Protection: The Need for Environmental Poverty Law, " Ecological Quarterly, 19(14).
Collin, Robert W. 1992. "Environmental Equity: Law and Planning Approach to Enviornmental Racism." Virginia Environmental Law Journal, 11:495-546.
Collin, Robert W.: Beatley, Timothy: Harris, Willam. 1995. "Environmental Racism: A Challenge to Community Development." Journal of Black Studies, 25(3)(Jan): 354(23 pages).
Commission for Racial Justice, United Church of Christ. 1987. Toxic Wastes and Race in the United States: A National Report on the Racial and Socioeconomic Characteristics of Communities with Hazardous Wastes Sites. New York: Public Data Access Inc.
Edwards, Mencer Donahue. 1992. "Sustainability and People of Color." (Relevance of environmental health on social justice). EPA Journal. 18(4)(Sept-Oct): 50(2 pages).
Fisher, Michael. 1995. "Environmental Racism Claims brought Under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act." Enviornmental Law, 25(2)(Spring): 285-334.
Foster, S. 1993. "Race(ial) Matters - The Quest for Enviornmental Justice." Ecology Law Quarterly, 20(4): 721-753.
Garcia, Arnoldo. 1990. "Environmental Inequities."
Crossroads, 16(June): 18-19.
The following was compiled by the Environmental Justice Resource Center.
ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE:
AN ANNOTATED BIBLYOGRAPHY
1980 - 1998
Prepared by
Ruth Neal and April Allen
Report Series EJRC/CAU-1-96
January 1996
(Updated June 1998)
Environmental Justice Resource Center
Clark Atlanta University
223 James P. Brawley Drive, SW
Atlanta, Georgia 30314
Phone: (404) 880-6911
Facsimile: (404) 880-6909
e-mail: ejrc@cau.edu
II. Environmental Justice and Environmental Equity
III. Unequal Protection and Environmental Racism
IV. Land Use and Facility Siting
Environmental justice embraces the principle that all people and communities are entitled to equal protection of environmental and public health laws and regulations. The environmental justice movement emerged in response to industry and government practices, policies, and conditions that many people judged to be unjust, unfair, and illegal. Some of these practices, policies, and conditions include (1) unequal enforcement of environmental, civil rights, and public laws, (2) differential exposure of some populations to harmful chemicals, pesticides, and other toxins in the home, school, neighborhood, and work place, (3) faulty assumptions in calculating and assessing risks, (4) discriminatory zoning and land-use practices, and (5) exclusionary policies and practices that limit some individuals and groups from participating in decision-making.
This bibliography presents environmental justice literature which has blossomed over the past fifteen years (1980-1995). Much of the literature was written after the 1991 First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit galvanized grassroots support around environmental and economic justice. The Summit advanced environmental justice beyond the anti-toxins focus to include such issues as facility siting, land use, transport of radioactive and nuclear wastes, worker safety, pesticide and lead poisoning, equal protection, and community empowerment. The work of Summit leaders also provided the impetus for government action (i.e., conferences, reports, advisory council, and an Executive Order) on environmental inequities.
The bibliography is designed as an education resource and will be periodically updated. It is not meant to be exhaustive. An interdisciplinary approach was taken in highlighting some of the major studies, articles, reports, monographs, and books written on environmental justice. The subject has captured the attention of a wide range of authors ranging from community activists, social scientists, environmentalists, lawyers, planners, health care professionals, and journalists.
The resource material is divided into five major subareas: (1) Environmental Justice and Environmental Equity, (2) Unequal Protection and Environmental Justice, (3) Land Use and Facility Siting (4) Legal and Law Review Articles, and (5) Books, Monographs, Reports, and Special Issues.
II. ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE AND ENVIRONMENTAL EQUITY
Arrandale, Tom. "Regulation and Racism." Governing. (March 1998):
63.
This article is about EPA?s decision to over-turn the state-issued
permit to build a plastics plant in poor and minority community in Louisiana.
Beasley, Conger. "Of pollution and poverty: Reaping America's unseemly
harvest." Buzzworm v2, n3 (May/June 1990): 40-47.
This article examines the environmental, economic, and health injustices
against the nation's migrant farmworkers of whom 90 percent to 95 percent
are people of color.
__________. "Of pollution and poverty: Keeping watch in Cancer Alley."
Buzzworm v2, n4 (July/August 1990): 39-45.
The author examines the poisoning of the lower Mississippi River by
the petrochemical industry and the destruction of people and communities.
Many of the African American communities were founded by former slaves.
__________. "Of pollution and poverty: Deadly threat on native lands."
Buzzworm v2, n5 (September/October 1990): 39-45.
Because of their quasi-sovereign status, Native American reservations
have become the "new" targets of environmental threats, ranging from household
garbage to hazardous and nuclear wastes. Most reservations do not have
the environmental and economic infrastructure to handle such waste in an
environmentally sound manner.
Bergman, B.J. "Club?s EPEC Sweep." Sierra (May 1998): 73-74.
This article is about Sierra Club?s Environmental Public Education
Campaign (EPEC) using volunteer activists to publicize the notion to Protect
America?s Environment: For Our Families, For Our Future.?
Brandt, Barbara. "Can We Build A New American Dream." Dollars &
Sense (May 1998): 28-29.
In this article, Ellen Furnari from the Center of New American Dream
is interviewed and he stressed the importance of reducing our excessive
consumption and waste to make American a better place live in and appreciate.
Brajer, V. & Hall J. Recent evidence on the distribution of air
pollution effects. Contemporary Policy Issues v2, n5 (April 1992):
63-70.
Using Toxic Release Inventory and Geographic Information System mapping,
this study associates levels of exposure to ozone and fine particulate
matter in the South Coast Air Basin of California with resident income,
race, age and education using a Regional Human Exposure Model. Results
are consonant with earlier research in most respects, except that population
density is negatively related to exposure. People of color and children
receive the greatest exposure levels.
Bruce, Calvin E. "Environmentalism and student activism." Black Collegian
v23, n4 (March/April 1993): 52-57.
This issue examines the racial dynamics of environmental problems and
gives advice to African-American collegians on solving this problem. It
also includes a directory of key organizations.
Bullard, Robert D. "Race, justice, and the environment." Who Cares
(Spring 1995): 34-41.
This article traces the growth and development of the environmental
justice movement and the role played by grassroots groups in redefining
environmentalism. Environment is seen as "where we live, work, and play,
as well as the physical and natural world."
__________. "Unequal protection: Incorporating environmental justice
in decision making." Pp. 237-266 in Adam M. Finkel and Dominic Golding,
ed., Worst Things First? The Debate over Risk-Based National Environmental
Priorities. Washington, DC: Resources for the Future, 1994.
This chapter was first presented as a paper at a conference addressing
alternative paradigms for assessing risks. The environmental justice paradigm
was presented as one tool to assess adverse and disproportionate human
health threats borne by low-income persons and people of color.
__________. "Environmental dispute resolution in communities of color."
Pp. 287-314 in James R. Fleming and Henry A. Gemery, eds., Science,
Technology, and the Environment: Multi disciplinary Perspectives. Akron,
OH: University of Akron Press, 1994.
This chapter chronicles the struggles of a dozen or so communities
of color that are faced with environmental threats. It also analyzes the
strategies used by grassroots groups and their leaders to address the environmental
disputes.
__________. "Environmental justice for all." Enviro Action Environmental
News Digest for the National Wildlife Federation (November 1991): 6-12.
Environmental justice has been introduced into the agendas of some
national environmental groups. This article was first presented as a Scholar-in-Residence
lecture at the National Wildlife Federation.
__________. "Grassroots flowering: The environmental justice movement
comes of age. " The Amicus Journal v16, n1 (Spring 1994): 32-37.
This article presents a historical analysis of the environmental justice
movement, where it came from and where it is headed. The author covers
struggles in the 1960s through 1994 and credits grassroots activism with
forcing and keeping the issues on the national agenda.
__________. "The quest for environmental equity: Mobilizing the African
American community for social change." Society and Natural Resources
v3 (1990): 301-311.
The struggles of rural, suburban, and urban African American communities
are examined in this article. Local leaders adapt the lesson learned from
the civil rights movement to mobilize their community around environmental
justice.
__________. "Urban infrastructure: Social, environmental and health
risks to African Americans." Pp. 183-196 Billy J. Tidwell (ed.), The
State of Black America 1992. New York: National Urban League, 1992.
Each year the National Urban League publishes its State of Black America
series. This issue was the first time the national civil rights organization
examined the link between urban infrastructure, environment, and health
issues in the African American community.
Bullard, Robert & Wright, Beverly H. "Environmental justice for
all: Community perspectives on health and research needs." Toxicology
and Industrial Health v9, n5 (September/October, 1993): 821-842.
This paper was first presented at a government-sponsored health research
workshop. It examines health and research concerns of communities of color
and under represented stakeholders and presents an environmental justice
framework for addressing environmental and health research inequities.
Burke, Lauretta M. "Race & environmental equity: A geographic analysis
in Los Angeles." Geo Info Systems (October 1993): 44, 46-47, 50.
This article is an excerpt from a larger report that evaluates the
significance of race and class on environmental pollution in Los Angeles
using Toxic Release Inventory data.
Cable, Sherry & Benson, Michael. "Acting locally: environmental
injustice and the emergence of grass-roots environmental organizations."
Social Problems v40, n4 (November 1993): 464-478.
The authors examine the emergence of grassroots environmental organizations.
They conclude that these organizations represent a new trend in the environmental
movement, and are part of a broader historical process involving the evolution
of the legal culture and the social control of corporate conduct in the
United States.
Camia, Catalina. "Poor, minorities want voices in environmental choices."
Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report v51, n34 (August 21, 1993): 2257-2260.
The author interviews civil rights leaders who are now pressing Congress
for help. Activists have mounted their own assault on environmental injustice,
unequal protection, and environmental racism.
Capek, Stella M. "The 'environmental justice' frame: a conceptual discussion
and an application. (Special Issue on Environmental Justice) Social
Problems v40, n1 (February 1993): 5-25.
This paper identifies some of the most salient dimensions of the 'environmental
justice' framework as it has emerged for local community struggles over
toxic contamination in the United States; and provides an empirical case
study of the contaminated Carver Terrace neighborhood of Texarkana, Texas.
Carver Terrace, an African American community consisting mostly of homeowners,
organized a federal buy-out and relocation after being declared a Superfund
site in 1984.
Carroll, Ginny. "When pollution hits home." National Wildlife
v29 (August/September 1991): 30-39.
The environmental problems in Louisiana's "Cancer Alley" abound. Residents
of the mostly African American community of Wallace was rezoned by the
local parish council to make way for the Formosa Plastics rayon plant.
Chemical Week v154, n4 (February 2, 1994): 27-28.
Progressive managers are forging theories about paths toward full environmental
stewardship. Progress on the development and implementation of recent concepts,
such as full-cost accounting, toxic risk reduction, environmental justice
and advanced product stewardship were highlighted at Chemical Week's conference
"From Compliance to Stewardship: Environmental Strategies for the Chemical
Industry," which was held January 19-21 1994, in Washington, D.C.
Chiro, Giovanna Di, "Defining environmental justice: Women's voices
and grassroots politics." Socialist Review v22, n4 (October-December
1992): 93-131.
The grassroots environmental movement is led largely by women who have
challenged gender and racial inequality. These activists are on the forefront
of change.
Collin, Robert W. "Environmental equity and the need for government
intervention." Environment, v35, n9 (November 1993): 41-43.
The author discusses the 1990 Greenpeace report that documents that
communities of color have a greater number of incinerators in their neighborhoods
and suggests that federal regulation could successfully address the problem
if the focus was on environmental damage rather than the intent of racial
discrimination.
Cordera-Guzman, Hector R. Lessons from operation bootstrap. NACLA
Report on the Americas v27, n3 (November/December 1993): 7-11.
Beginning in the 1950s, Puerto Rico s development was tied to market-oriented
reforms and to the U.S. economy. The mixed results for the people and environment
give some clues to what Mexico can look forward to in a North American
Free Trade Agreement-dominated future.
Cotton, Paul. "Pollution and poverty overlap becomes issue, administration
promises action." Journal of the American Medical Association v271,
n13 (April 6, 1994): 967-970.
The Clinton Administration is focusing its anti-poverty efforts on
environmental justice and pollution control. The EPA has been heavily criticized
for its lack of action on environmental justice matters.
Cutter, Susan. "The burdens of toxic risks : Are they fair?" Business
& Economic Review v41, n1 (October-December 1994): 3-7.
Questions have been raised on the differential impact of environmental
risks on people and places. This issue is discussed in South Carolina,
where much of the state's economic base includes high risk industry.
Davis, Morris E. "The impact of workplace health and safety on black
workers: Assessment and prognosis," Labor Law Journal v4 (Spring,
1981): 29-40.
This article critically examines the problem of differential exposure
of blacks to work place hazards. The author also analyzes the role of job
segmentation and racial discrimination on the quality of black workers.
Doyle, Kevin. "Environmental justice: A growing movement." Black
Collegian v24, n4 (March-April, 1994): 36-40.
This article traces the environmental justice movement from the 1980s
to the 1990s. The author sees the movement evolving as a way to counter
unfair public policies. Pressures from the movement resulted in the establishment
of EPA's Environmental Justice Office, which has sponsored a variety of
research and educational projects that keep the general public informed
about numerous environmental issues.
Easton, Billy. "WHEACT for justice." (West Harlem Environmental Action,
New York New York) Environmental Action Magazine v24, n4 (Winter,
1993): 33-35.
This article profiles two African American women, Peggy Shepard and
Vernice Miller, who founded West Harlem Environmental Action (WHE ACT)
to fight the North River Sewage Treatment Plant. The group targets such
examples of affluent development dumping on poor minority neighborhoods,
which they term environmental racism.
Edwards, Mencer Donahue. "Sustainability and people of color." EPA
Journal v18, n4 (September-October 1992): 50.
Sustainable development may be a means to achieve social justice for
peoples of color in the United States. Sustainability must be linked with
social, economic, and environmental justice at home an abroad.
Environmental justice in Tennessee. Occupational Hazards v56,
n 2 (February 1994): 19.
An EPA report that found a correlation between toxic releases in a
six-county area near Chattanooga, TN, an area where many residents are
poor, uneducated people of color is discussed. Data revealed that residents
of people of color communities are at increased risk of suffering dust
diseases, poisonings, skin diseases and environmental cancers.
"Environmental justice needs science backing group says." Chemical
Marketing Reporter v246, n13 (September 26, 1994): 28.
John Kyte of the National Association of Manufacturers, environmental
policies set-up by the government must be based on science to gain support
of the industry.
"Environmental justice proponents have Washington's ear." Environment
Today v5, n3 (March 1994): 6-7.
An Executive Order signed in February 1994 directs federal agencies
to develop programs to address the environmental problems faced by the
nation's underprivileged.
Feingold, Eugene. "Working on environmental justice." Nation's Health
v24, n3 (March 1994): 2.
President Clinton issued Executive Order 12898 in February 1994 to
address environmental hazards in low-income and minority communities. Federal
agencies are mandated to develop strategies to address these problems.
Fugazzotto, Peter. "Angling for environmental justice." Earth Island Journal v9, n3 (Summer 1994): 19. Kalon Wofford and Anthony Willis, San Francisco Bay area anglers, are attempting to stop Exxon and Unical from polluting the bay with selenium. Wofford and Willis, leaders of San Francisco Advocates for Environmental Rights are discussed.
Gianessi, L. & Peskin, H.M. "The distribution of federal water pollution
control policy in the U.S." Land Economics v56, n1 (February, 1980):
85-102.
This study examines the regulatory cost of water pollution control
policy. The author documents socioeconomic and racial disparities in water
quality.
Gottlieb, Robert. "A question of class: The workplace experience." Socialist
Review v22, n4 (October-December 1992): 131-166.
Environmental justice extends into the workplace. Modern industrial
facilities which produce less pollution ultimately result in more secure
jobs and cleaner air for the whole community.
Hair, Jay D. "Providing for justice as well as jobs," (advice to President
Clinton) National Wildlife v31, n2 (February-March 1993): 30.
The CEO of the nation's largest environmental organization, NWF, gives
advice to the new Clinton administration. It s not enough that there should
be environmental justice, but also that environmental racism should be
eliminated.
Hahn-Baker, David; Shepard, Peggy & Gauna, Jeanne. "Rocky roads
to consensus." Amicus Journal v16, n1 (Spring 1994): 41-43.
The rift between traditional environmental groups and environmental
justice advocates remains to be resolved despite the continued efforts
to unite the ideas of the two camps. This division was evident in the controversy
that surrounded the North American Free Trade Agreement in 1993.
Hutchings, Vicky. "Green gauge." New Statesmen & Society v7,
n323 (October 7, 1994): 32.
Co-editor of the 'Ecologist' magazine is profiled. Nicholas Hilyard's
view on environmental justice is discussed.
Ingram, Helen; Milich, Lenard & Varnady, Robert G. "Managing transboundary
resources: Lessons from Ambos Nogales." Environment v36, n4 (May
1994): 6-9, 28-38.
This case study of water management in Ambos Nogales, reveals the pitfalls
and possibilities for improvement in managing natural resources shared
by the United States and Mexico.
Keeva, Steven & Wharton, Joseph. "A breath of justice." ABA Journal
v80 (February 1994): 88-92.
In the expanding field of environmental justice, legal protection for
communities burdened by environmental dumping is now emerging as a new
civil right.
Knickerbocker, Brad. "Fighting for a Cleaner Environment: Two Decades
After Love Canal Put Toxic Waste on the Map, Industry Tries to Keep Clean."
Christian Science Monitor (April 30, 1998): 4.
This article points to organizations posting information on their webpages
about the dangers of chemicals in communities across the United States.
For example, the Environmenal Defense Fund and the State of Pennsylvania.
Lavelle, Marianne. "Residents want justice. The EPA offers 'equity.'"
National Law Journal v15, n3 (Monday, September 21, 1992): s12.
The author examines activists response to the creation of EPA's Office
of Environmental Equity. Environmental justice leaders give EPA head William
K. Riley passing marks for his efforts, but charge the Bush administration
and the agency in general with a lack of interest in environmental justice.
__________. Help sought from green justice panel. National Law Journal
v 17, n9 (October 31, 1994) A16.
A plaintiff s group in Texarkana, TX has become the first community
to ask a new federal environmental justice advisory council to intervene
on its behalf. The group charges the government did not compensate them
for the fair market value of their homes.
Lee, Charles. "Developing working definitions of urban environmental
justice. "Earth Island Journal v8, n4 (Fall 1993): 41.
This article focuses on the urban environmental crisis where people
of color are condemned to live in polluted areas. Many of the residents
and their communities are considered disposable. Urban rebuilding and environmental
justice are compatible goals.
Lewis, Victor. "A Message to white environmentalists." Earth Island
Journal v7, n4 (Fall, 1992): 41.
Environmental, economic and health injustice hit female workers, young
mothers, very old workers and workers of color the hardest. White environmentalists
need to join in the call for wealth redistribution and an end to exploitation
of disenfranchised and powerless groups.
Lucas, Allison. "Report charges no improvement in environmental justice."
Chemical Week v155, n8 (August 31/September 7, 1995): 9.
In a study commissioned by the Center for Policy Alternatives it was
revealed that toxic waste facilities are more likely to be located in minority
communities now than in 1987 when the Commission for Racial Justice Toxic
Wastes and Race study was first published.
Maxwell, Jessica. "Audubon notes-Hazel Wolf: Audubon archangel." Audubon
v96, n6 (November 1994): 126-128.
Activist Hazel Wolf discusses her involvement in the Audubon Society
and why she has made environmental justice her priority.
Pardo, Mary. "Creating community: Mexican American women in Eastside
Los Angeles." AZTLAN - a Journal of Chicano Studies v20, n1-2 (Spring/Fall,
1991): 39.
This article chronicles grassroots organizing in an East Los Angeles
community. Many lessons can be learned from Mothers of East Los Angeles,
a Latino group organized around environmental justice.
Puckett, Jim. "Disposing of the waste-trade: Closing the recycling loophole."
Ecologist v24, n2 (March/April 1994).
This article reviews the importance of the Basil Convention and attempts
to control the transboundary movement of hazardous wastes. It also examines
strategies to close the recycling loopholes and thus achieve effective
global ban on the international waste trade.
Radford, Bruce W. "Regulatory justice." Fortnightly v132, n13
(July 1, 1994): 39-40.
Discusses recent regulatory occurrences on the issue of environmental
justice, whistle blower protection and antitrust activism.
Ramirez, Odessa. "The loss of native lands and economic blackmail."
Social Justice v19, n2 (Summer 1992): 78-86.
This article examines the loss of indigenous peoples' lands in exchange
for so-called "economic relief." Examples of environmental "blackmail"
are examined in Canada and the United States.
Reath, Viki. "EPA to use civil rights act in siting decision." Environmental
Week v6, n36 (October 7, 1993): 1.
The author examines EPA's new strategy of applying Title VI of the
Civil Rights Act to enforcement. Interviews are included with NAACP Legal
Defense Fund lawyer Bill Lee of Los Angeles and several other environmental
justice leaders.
__________. "EPA, Commission investigating civil rights allegations."
Environmental Week v6, n40 (October 14, 1993): 1.
Discusses EPA's and the U.S. Civil Rights Commission's investigation
of civil rights allegations in siting four hazardous waste facilities in
Mississippi and Louisiana.
__________. "EPA to probe Texas environmental justice complaint." Environmental
Week v7, n14 (April 7, 1994): 1.
This article describes the complaint against the Texas Natural Resources
Conservation Commission challenging its permitting of a commercial hazardous
waste incinerator along the Houston Ship Channel.
Robinson, James C. "Exposure to occupational hazards among Hispanics,
blacks, and non-Hispanic whites in California." American Journal of
Public health v79 (1989): 629-630.
The author documents that people of color are more likely to be exposed
to occupational hazards and suffer work-related illnesses than are whites.
__________. "Racial inequality and the probability of occupation-related
injury or illness." Millbank Quarterly v62 (1984): 567-588.
This article provides major empirical documentation that African Americans
and Latinos suffer greater exposure to health hazards on the job than white
workers in similar occupations.
Robinson, Lori. "Fighting Dirty." Emerge (July/August 1995):
42-47.
This article discuses environmental racism and how polluting industries
have knowingly contaminated African-American communities.
Rosen, Ruth. "Who gets polluted?" Dissent v41, n2 (Spring 1994):
223-230.
The causes of environmental justice and industrial pollution are examined
and the grassroots activism of minority groups is discussed. This movement,
which is primarily led by low-income individuals, is concerned with the
environmental hazards and economic inequalities that are rampant in their
communities. Also discusses industrial accident in Richmond, CA that sent
more the 20,000 residents to the hospital.
Saika, Peggy. "APEN brings Asian Pacific perspective to environmental
justice." The Washington Office of Environmental Justice Newsletter
(Summer 1995): 5.
Discusses the Asian Pacific Environmental Network, which focuses on
the specific concerns of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders. Examples
of these concerns are economic development, social equity, and community
empowerment.
Schaffer, Gwen. "Asian Americans organize for justice." Environmental
Action v25, n4 (Winter 1994): 30.
Asian Americans are beginning to network around environmental issues,
including occupational health, toxics, and land use problems that adversely
affect their communities.
Schneider, Paul. "Respect for the Earth: The environmentalism of Chief
Oren Lyons stems from his Iroquois heritage." Audobon v96, n2 (March/April
1994): 110-115.
Environmentalism could learn a great deal from Native Americans and
other indigenous peoples. One such leader is Chief Oren Lyons, who lives
in the Onondaga Nation Territory outside of Syracuse, N.Y.
Schueler, Donald. Southern Exposure. Sierra v77 (November/December
1992): 42-49.
The South still holds the unique distinction as having the most polluted
air, water, and ground of any region in the country as a result of lax
enforcement of environmental laws and the look-the-other-way government
policy.
Selcraig, Bruce. Border Patrol. Sierra v79, n3 (May/June 1994):
58-68.
Environmental activist Domingo Gonzalez crusades against maquiladoras
of Mexico. He has witnessed the squalid colonias of Matramoros, Mexico,
across the border from Brownsville, Texas. Domingo is the co-founder of
the Coalition for Justice in the Maquiladoras, which attempts to educate
the public and the media about the health effects on the local population.
Small, Gail. "War stories: Environmental justice in Indian country."
The Amicus Journal v16, n1 (Spring 1994): 38-41.
As member of the Northern Cheyenne Indian Tribe, Small examines the
complex environmental justice issues facing sovereign Indian Nations.
Spears, Ellen. "Freedom buses roll along cancer alley." Southern
Changes. Southern Regional Council, Atlanta v15, n1 (Spring 1993):
1-11.
More than 2,000 activists attended an environmental justice/labor conference
in New Orleans during December 1992. The tour of 'Cancer Alley' illuminated
the many problems faced by residents along the Mississippi River.
Starkey, Deb. "Environmental justice: Win, lose or draw?" State Legislatures
v20, n3 (March 1994): 27-31.
People of color and their communities are endangered by their close
proximity to a disproportionate number of health-threatening facilities,
such as hazardous waste dumps and incinerators. The Clinton administration
has begun some environmental justice initiatives, but more still has to
be done.
Truax, Hawley. "Beyond white environmentalism: Minorities and the environment."
Environmental Action v21 (1990): 19-30.
This article profiles several people of color leaders in the environmental
movement and calls for more outreach to the poor, working class, and people
of color communities.
Weinstock, Matthew P. "Tired of being dumped on." Occupational Hazards v56, n4 (April 1994): 48-52. EPA concluded that minority and low income communities experience a higher than average exposure to air pollution, hazardous waste facilities and other plants. EPA is developing a strategy to improve enforcement in these overburdened communities.
Wernette, D.R. & Nieves, L.A. "Breathing polluted air." EPA Journal v18 (March/April 1992): 16-17. Two National Argonne Laboratory researchers examine air pollution in the United States and conclude that African Americans and Latinos live in the most polluted counties in the nation.
Wheeler, David L. "When the poor face environmental risks." Chronicle
of Higher Education v40, n25 (February 23, 1994): A10-A11.
This article explores the Health Research and Needs to Ensure Environmental
Justice symposium. The government-sponsored symposium was held in February
1994 in Arlington, VA., and attracted more than 1,000 research scientists,
academicians, environmental justice activists, civil rights leaders, and
impacted community residents.
Whitehead, Wendy. "EPA's OSWER is first to embrace environmental justice
policy." Environment Today v5, n7 (July 1994): 11.
The EPA's Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response or OWSER has
developed a series of recommendations to address environmental justice
in its waste programs.
"White House, church groups join 'environmental justice' crusade." Environment
Today v5, n1 (January 1994): 3,16.
Vice President Al Gore told representatives of the Black Church Environmental
Justice Summit that the White House plans to issue an executive order that
will require greater public participation on the selection of hazardous
waste sites as well as higher health standards for participation.
Wright, Beverly H. & Bullard, Robert D. "Hazards in the workplace
and black health." National Journal of Sociology v4 (1990): 45-52.
African American workers often occupy the lowest paying and dirtiest
jobs. Workplace hazards, racial discrimination and "job blackmail" present
a special case for African American workers who are twice as likely to
be unemployed than their counterparts.
Zimmermann, Rae. "Social equity and environmental risk." Risk Analysis
v13, n6 (1993): 649-666.
This article examines inactive hazardous waste disposal sites on the
National Priorities List (NPL) and their location relative to communities
of color and distribution of cleanup plans or Record of Decision (ROD).
The author finds that the percentage of African Americans and Latinos aggregated
at the Census Place level in communities with NPL sites was greater than
is typical nationwide.
Zindo, Carolyne. "Three-Year Prison Term Over East Palo Alto Toxic Waste
Case; City Wants Bayfront Area Cleaned Up." San Francisco Chronicle
(April 8, 1998): A18.
This article examines an East Palo Alto autoyard that is a site with
plenty of toxic waste. The Bayfront community wants the autoyard cleaned
up because it is known for being a dumping ground for junked automoibles
from the San Francisco area.
III. UNEQUAL PROTECTION AND ENVIRONMENTAL RACISM
"Back New Waste Strategy." The Denver Post (April 3, 1998): B10.
This article has an editorial that supports a superfund provision that
exempts organizations that are willing to clean up toxic waste sites.
Brook, Daniel. "Environmental Genocide: Native Americans and Toxic Waste." American Journal of Economics and Sociology (AES). (January 1998): 105-113.
Bruno, Kenny. "Philly Waste Go Home." Multinational Monitor (January
1998): 7-8.
This article mentions that the 4,000 tons of toxic incinerator ash
dumped by Philadelphia in Gonaives Bay, Haiti will be redelivered to Philadelphia.
Bullard, Robert D. "The threat of environmental racism." Natural
Resources & Environment v7 (Winter 1993): 23-26, 55-56.
This article examines the problems faced by people of color when they
challenge discriminatory environmental practices using civil rights laws.
__________. "Waste and racism: A stacked deck?" Forum for Applied
Research and Public Policy v8 (Spring 1993): 29-45.
Institutionalized racism has influenced waste facility siting patterns,
resulting in communities of color bearing a disproportionate burden for
treatment, storage, and disposal facilities.
__________. "Environmental racism." Environmental Protection
v2, n4 (June 1991): 25-26.
Details some interesting case studies and examples where communities
of color receive less environmental protection than their white counterparts.
__________. "Ecological inequities and the new South: Black communities
under siege." Journal of Ethnic Studies v17 (Winter, 1990): 101-115.
Because of differential treatment and the legacy of "Jim Crow," many
African American communities in the South are endangered communities.
__________. "Overcoming racism in environmental decisionmaking." Environment.
v36, n4 (May 1994): 10-20, 39-44.
The author explores links between environmental measures and social
justice and catalogs numerous examples of policies that force people of
color and the politically disenfranchised to bear environmental burdens.
Cohen, Linc. "Waste dumps toxic traps for minorities." The Chicago
Reporter, v21, n4 (April 1992): 6-9, 11.
This article discusses environmental racism within the context of Chicago
(especially the Southside neighborhoods) and environmental justice activists
battles against waste dumps in their communities.
Coyle, Marcia. "Company will not build plant." National Law Journal
v15, n7 (Mon, Oct 19, 1992): 3, 47.
A two-year legal battle has ended with the Formosa Plastic's Corp's
decision not to build a $700-million rayon and pulp processing plant in
a low-income, African American area of Louisiana known as 'Cancer Alley.'
Environmentalists, civil rights groups and health organizations claimed
the project constituted environmental racism. The National Law Journal
included Wallace, LA's fight with Formosa in the paper's Sept. 21, 1992,
supplement "Unequal Protection: The Racial Divide in Environmental Law."
"EPA Rules Let Heavy Industries Sell Toxic Wastes to Fertilizer Companies."
The Wall Street Journal (March 27, 1998): B7.
This article mentions how EPA rules allow industries to send toxicash
from smokestacks to fertilizer plants without testing it or documenting
where it is going to be shipped.
Ervin, Mike. "The toxic doughnut: Toxic wastes in minority neighborhoods."
Progressive. v56, n1 (January 1992): 15.
The community of Altgeld Gardens, a public housing project located
on Chicago's Southside, is encircled by environmental and health threats.
Hazel Johnson, an activist from Altgeld Gardens and founder of People for
Community Recovery, has tagged her neighborhood a "toxic doughnut."
Gelobter, Michael. "Toward a model of environmental discrimination."
Pp. 64-81 in B. Bryant and P. Mohai, eds., Race and the Incidence of
Environmental Hazards. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1992.
This study reveals that air pollution in urban areas is correlated
with both income and race of communities. Inequities associated with air
quality have placed the urban poor and people of color at greater risk
than the larger society.
Howe, Peter J. "A Personal Link in Pittsfield; Pollution Woes Face City
GE Chief Once Called Home." Boston Globe (May 14, 1998): B1.
The United States government has filed 80 or more superfund suits against
General Electric. General Electric is dragging its feet about these suits
by downplaying the severity of the pollution at these toxic waste sites.
Joradn, Charles. "From toxic racism to environmental justice." E:
The Environmental Magazine v3, n3 (June 1992): 28-35.
Explores the evolution and growth of the environmental justice movement
and the struggle against environmental racism. Perspectives are presented
from interviews with several founders of the movement.
__________. "Environmental racism." Crisis v 98, n4 (April 1991):
14-17, 31-32.
This was one of the first articles published in the NAACP's Crisis,
a magazine founded by W.E.B. DuBois, on environmental racism. Interviews
are conducted with key leaders in the environmental justice movement.
Jetter, Alexis. "The poisoning of a dream." (environmental activist
Patsy Ruth Oliver) Vogue v183, n11 (November 1993): 213.
Patsy Ruth Oliver fought against environmental racism, toxic pollution
of communities inhabited by people of color. Her own community (Carver
Terrace) of Texarkana, TX, suffered serious health problems from underground
toxic waste. The EPA had deemed the area safe, but Congress later overturned
this ruling.
Johnston, David Cay. "Company Would be Given Rewards for Retirement
and Education Plans." The New York Times (February 3, 1998): A18.
The Clinton Administration supports the 1997 Taxpayer Relief Act that
allow many corporations to treat the costs toxic-waste sites clean up to
be an expense that can be deducted instead of the costs being capital investments
that must be amortized over several years.
Jones, Stephen C. "EPA targets environmental racism." (part 1) National
Law Journal v15, n49 (August 9, 1993): 28.
The U.S. EPA's Office of Environmental Equity has begun focusing on
efforts to educate the public on environmental racism. In the courts, the
most common basis for environmental racism cases has so far been the equal
protection clause. Legislation to help bring about environmental justice
has been introduced to Congress.
__________. "Inequities of industrial siting addressed." (environmental
racism) (part 2) National Law Journal v15, n50 (Mon, August 16,
1993): 20.
Claims of environmental racism can be brought under Title VI of the
1964 Civil Rights Act. The Act prohibits federal funds from being used
to discriminate based on race and color. When using Title VI, plaintiffs
need only prove disparate impact rather than the discriminatory intent
which would be required under an equal protection claim.
Kriz, Margaret. "Fish and Foul." National Journal (February 28,
1998): 450-453.
This article is about the general public demanding special attention
and the elimination of toxic runoff from farms, streets and mines.
Lavelle, Marianne. "Transition meets with minorities: Environmental
activists." National Law Journal, v15, n15 (December 14, 1992):
3.
People of color leaders of environmental justice groups met with members
of Clinton-Gore transition team to urge them to address issues of environmental
racism. Richard Moore of the SouthWest Network for Environmental and Economic
Justice was instrumental in bringing these meetings about and believes
environmental spokespeople should have input into the selection of EPA
officials.
_________. "Environmental racism targeted: Congressional hearing." National
Law Journal v15, n26 (March 1, 1993): 3.
The House Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on Civil and Constitutional
Rights will hold hearings on environmental racism on Mar 3-4, 1993. Chairman
Don Edwards stated that part of his inspiration for the hearings was the
National Law Journal report on the subject in the Sept. 21, 1992 issue.
Lack of equity for minority communities under the Superfund program and
environmental enforcement of the Indian reservation lands will be among
the areas investigated by the subcommittee.
_________ & Coyle, Marcia. Unequal protection: The racial divide
on environmental law. National Law Journal (September 21, 1993).
This special supplement examines the different treatment of communities
under EPA s Superfund program. The authors conclude that white communities
receive quicker action and more comprehensive cleanup strategies than communities
of color even when income is held constant.
MacLachlan, Claudia. "Tension underlies rapport with grassroots groups."
National Law Journal, v15, n3 (September 21, 1992): 10.
In 1990, two grassroots groups, the Gulf Coast Tenants' Leadership
Development Program and the SouthWest Organizing Project, charged the large,
mainstream environmental groups also known as the "Big Ten" with lack of
attention to toxic dangers in low-income communities and communities of
color.
MacLean, Alair. "Bigotry and poison." (Gulf Coast Tenants' Organization,
Louisiana) Progressive v57, n1 (Jan 1993): 14.
Gulf Coast Tenants Organizations are fighting environmental racism
in the location of polluting industries along the 85-mile stretch of the
Mississippi River from Baton Rouge to New Orleans commonly known as "Cancer
Alley."
Martinez, Elizabeth. "Defending the earth in '92: A people's challenge
to the EPA." (Environmental Protection Agency) Social Justice v19,
n2 (Summer 1992): 95.
Environmental racism has been relentlessly pursued by concerned organizations
after the publication of the United Church of Christ Commission for Racial
Justice's 1987 Toxic Wastes and Race study. The SouthWest Organizing Project
based in Albuquerque, NM has been active in combating environmental and
economic injustice.
Meyer, Eugene L. "Environmental racism: Why is it always dumped in our
backyard? Minority groups take a stand." Audubon v94, n1 (Jan/Feb.
1992): 30-32.
Civil rights activist Rev. Benjamin F. Chavis Jr. coined the term 'environmental
racism' in 1982. He echoed this battle cry during the struggle against
the siting of a hazardous waste landfill in the mostly African American
Warren County, North Carolina. Warren County was not unique, but represented
a pattern across the United States.
Minter, Stephen G. Environmental Injustice? Occupational Hazards
v55, n8 (August 1993): 7.
Article reviews provisions of the Environmental Justice Act of 1993.
Author notes that a Cleveland State University study found no correlation
between race and toxicity in Cuyahoga County. Yet, he notes that environmental
management should not be treated as a purely technical function, since
real or perceived threats to people s environments carry tremendous emotional
impact. Failure by environmental professionals to take environmental racism
seriously could be harmful to a company s well-being.
Multinational Monitor, "The politics of race and pollution: An
interview with Robert Bullard." (University of California sociology professor)
v13, n6 (June 1992): 21-25.
Sociologist Robert Bullard talks about his work in communities of color
and their concern about environmental justice. He stated that persons of
color are often excluded from the decision making process which affect
their communities' health and environment. As a result, locally undesirable
land uses and other potential health threats are diverted toward economically
and politically disenfranchised communities. However, communities of color
are learning to organize themselves, and some have succeeded in their efforts
to counter environmental racism.
"Occidental Chemical Settles Cleanup Suits Over Love Canal Site." The
Wall Street Journal (April 29, 1998): B2.
The Occidental Chemical Corporation dropped the multi-million dollar
claims against the city of Niagara Falls on the evacuation of residents
who lived near the Love Canal toxic-waste site.
Panel discussion. "A place at the table: A Sierra roundtable on race,
justice, and the environment." Sierra v78, n3 (May-June, 1993):
50-60.
Environmental justice advocates examine and evaluate the major environmental
groups and their work on issues concerning communities of color. The panelists
conclude that the groups have contributed to elitism and racism within
the larger environmental movement.
Rees, Matthew. "Black and green: Race and environmentalism." New
Republic v206, n9 (March 2, 1992): 15-16.
People of color environmental activists voice their concern on the
problem of eco-racism, which is typified by the location of waste facilities
and other environmentally dubious projects in their neighborhoods. They
also charge mainstream environmental organizations with ignoring their
concerns.
Reilly, Sean E. "Down the Drain." The Environmental Magazine (March
1998): 26-27.
This article examines pre-treatment program that EPA developed in the
70s and 80s where public sewage treatment plants can set up their own treatment
operations to remove toxic waste before dumping it into their sewers.
Reitman, Janet. "The Battle for Convent." Scholastic Update (April
13, 1998): 4-6.
This article is about residents in Convent, LA who are determined to
keep the Japanese Company Shintech from building a proposed plastic plant
in their backyard.
Rodriquez, Cindy."State Vows Probe into Nyanza Site, But Cleanup Stalled
Til 1999." Boston Globe (March 8, 1998): W1.
This is examines the Nyanza Inc. which is a dye and chemical manufacturer.
There are questions about the high number of kidney and bladder cancer
diagnoses near the site.
Rosenfeld, Dave. "Superfund Tax Should Be Restored." St. Louis Post-Dispatch (March 16, 1998): B7. There are 85,000 or more hazardous waste sites across the United States which impact the quality of life of American citizens. Americans are exposed to lead, mercury, benzene, and arsenic which all are toxic chemcials.
Satchell, Michael. "A whiff of discrimination? Racism and environmental
policy." U.S. News & World Report v112, n17 (May 4, 1992): 34-36.
This article asks whether environmental racism is real or imagined.
It attempts to reduce environmental inequities to class and poverty, while
ignoring voluminous studies that clearly demonstrate that racism still
operates in contemporary American life.
Siler, Julia Flynn. "Environmental racism? It could be a messy fight."
Business Week (May 20, 1991): 116.
This article examines the battle waged by People for Clean Air and
Water in Kettleman City, California (a mostly Latino farmworker community)
against Chemical Waste Management. The company proposed to site a hazardous
waste incinerator in the community.
Simon, Stephanie. "Tourism With a Messae; 'Reality Tours' Acquaint Vacationers
with Sweatshops, Slums and Toxic Waste; Guilt is for Sale, as Well as Inspiration
and Perhaps, Redemption." Los Angeles Times (February 15, 1998):
A1.
This article describes how Global Exchange in San Francisco conduct
tours on showing tourists various toxic wastes sites and hazardous wastes
conditions in Cuba, Haiti, Guatemala, Vietnam and the United States.
Steinhart, Peter. "What can we do about environmental racism?: Coping
with the tendency to build freeways, prisons and waste facilities in poor
and minority communities." Audubon. v93, n3 (May 1991): 18-22.
This article explores the disparate burden and regressive impact of
the construction of freeways, prisons, and waste facilities on the poor
and people of color.
Taliman, Valerie. "Stuck holding the nation's nuclear waste." Race,
Poverty & the Environment (Fall 1992): 6-10.
This articles discusses the DOE proposal to build monitored storage
retrievable (MRS) facilities and the response from the dozen or so Native
American tribes. The vast majority of the responses from a DOE request
for proposal came from tribes.
__________. "Saving native lands: One woman's crusade against environmental
racism," Ms. Magazine v4, n4 (January-February 1994): 28-29.
JoAnn Tall, an Oglala Lakota Indian, has devoted her life to the protection
and sustenance of Native lives and lands. Her commitment to the environment
is based on her people's deep respect for the natural world.
Thigpen, David. "The playground that became a battle ground. (Kingsley
Park Playground of Buffalo, New York's arsenic contaminated soil)" National
Wildlife v31, n2 (February-March 1993): 14-18.
African American residents in Buffalo, New York are engaged in a battle
to get government officials to remove arsenic from the Kingsley Park Playground.
Arsenic was detected in the park as early as 1983. However, government
action has been slow.
Ward, Bud. "Environmental racism becomes key Clinton EPA focus." Safety
& Health v149, n3 (March 1994): 183-187.
Many environmental justice experts challenge racial discrimination
and disparate siting of potentially environmentally harmful waste facilities
such as incinerators. EPA administrator Carol Browner has begun to infuse
environmental justice issues into the agency's decision-making process.
IV. LAND USE AND FACILITY SITING
Brion, Denis J. "An essay on LULU, NIMBY, and the problem of distributive
justice." Boston College Environmental Affairs Law Review v15, n3-4
(Spring 1988): 437-503.
Examines the problems associated with the distribution of locally unwanted
land uses, the not-in-my-backyard (NIMBY) phenomenon, and unequal power
in society.
Bullard, Robert D. "Solid waste sites and the Houston black community,"
Sociological Inquiry v53, n2/3 (Spring 1983): 273-288.
This was one of the first studies to document the relationship between
municipal solid waste siting and race. The study was conducted in support
of the first lawsuit, Bean v. Southwestern Management, filed using the
1965 Civil Rights Act. The study reveals that five out of five city-owned
landfills and six out of eight city-owned incinerators were located in
mostly African American Houston neighborhoods. Three of the four privately-owned
landfills were located in mostly African American neighborhoods.
__________. "Environmental racism and land uses." Land Use Forum:
A Journal of Law, Policy & Practice v2 (Spring 1993): 6-11.
This article explores discriminatory land use practices as an extension
of racial bias in environmental decision making.
_________. "In our backyards: Minority communities get most of the dumps."
EPA Journal v18 (March/April 1992): 11-12.
Waste facilities are not randomly distributed across the landscape.
Communities of color bare a disproportionate burden as a result of nearby
waste facilities.
Costner, Pat & Thronton, Joe. Playing with Fire: Hazardous Waste
Incineration. Washington, DC: Greenpeace, 1990.
This Greenpeace report documents that renters, low-income, and people
of color communities bear a disproportionate burden for the location of
hazardous waste incinerators and proposals for new waste incinerators.
Freudenburg, William R. & Pastor, Susan K. "NIMBY's and LULU's: stalking the syndrome." Journal of Social Issues v48, n4 (Winter 1992): 39-61.
Greenberg, Michael R. "Proving environmental inequity in siting locally
unwanted land uses." Risk Issues In Health & Safety. v4 (Summer
1993): 235-252.
his paper explores land use decision making and the problems of "proving"
environmental inequality associated with LULUs.
Hamilton, James T. Politics and social costs; Estimating the impact
of collective action on hazardous waste facilities." Rand Journal of
Economics v24, n1 (Spring 1993): 101-125.
Using national data at the county level, the author documents that
hazardous waste facility siting is related to both income and racial composition
of the surrounding community.
Inhaber, Herbert. "Of LULU's, NIMBY's, and NIMTOO's." Public Interest n107 (Spring 1992): 52. The public response to locally unwanted land uses gave rise to not-in-my-backyard. Public officials have reacted with "not-in-my-term-of-office."
Jaffe, Susan. "Bhopal in the backyard? When the folks next door are
industrial polluters, it's time for a chat." Sierra (September/October
1993): 52-53.
Industrial pollution and the threat to nearby communities are real
and need to be addressed before a disaster occurs.
Kay, Jane. "Minorities bear brunt of pollution." San Francisco Examiner
April 7-10, 1991.
This four-part series documents that people of color in California
are paying a high price with their health. The series profiles California's
"dirtiest" zip codes in terms of air quality which happen to be located
in African American or Latino neighborhoods.
Ketkar, Kusum, "Hazardous waste sites and property values in the state
of New Jersey," Applied Economics v24 (1992): 647-653.
This study examines hazardous waste sites in New Jersey to establish
the link between hazardous waste sites and property values, and to determine
the effect of partnership between the polluting firms/industries and property
owners/developers on the equity and efficiency issues pertinent to the
speedy clean-up of hazardous waste sites. The author evaluated the gains
in property values from clean-up of hazardous waste sites in 64 municipalities
from 7 urban counties in the state. The author concluded that the present
"polluter pays" principle, where the clean-up costs are borne by the responsible
parties, should be replaced by a cost-sharing model, which would lead to
quicker cleanup, increased property values, and additional tax revenues
to the state.
Lampe, David. "The politics of environmental equity." National Civic
Review v81, n1 (Winter/Spring 1992): 27.
Some communities because of their race, class, and political powerlessness
are forced to accept risky jobs and polluting industries that others can
escape.
"Not in my backyard: IR&R joins in quest for environmental justice:
ABA house passes resolution." Human Rights v20, n4 (Fall 1993):
26-29.
In a historic move, the Individual Rights and Responsibilities Section
of the ABA together with the House of Delegates passes a resolution to
end environmental racism. They also call for Congress to pass the Environmental
Justice Act of 1993.
O'Looney, John. "Framing a social market for community responsibility:
Governing in an age of NIMBYs and LULUs." National Civic Review
v82, n1 (Winter 1993): 44.
Policy makers are attempting to develop a mechanism for the equitable
distribution of locally unwanted land uses. Suggestions of "organized markets"
and "market framework" approaches to land use decisions are made.
Russell, Sherri & Mitchell, Goro. "Atlanta's environment and the
black community." Pp. 98-137 in Bob Holmes, ed., The Status of Black
Atlanta 1994. Atlanta: The Southern Center for Studies in Public Policy,
Clark Atlanta University, 1994.
This chapter details the disproportionate impact of environmental hazards
on Atlanta's African American population. The analysis focuses on sewer
treatment facilities and strategies to address overflow, landfills, incinerators,
childhood lead poisoning, and a host of other environmental problems.
Unger, Donald G.; Wandersman, A. & Hallman W. "Living near a hazardous
waste facility: Coping with individual and family distress." American
Journal of Orthopsychiatry v55 (1992): 62.
This study explores the population living near the Pinewood, South
Carolina hazardous waste site. Low income African Americans bear the greatest
burden associated with the disposal facility.
Walsh, Edward, Warland, Rex & Smith, Clayton D. Backyards, NIMBY's
and incinerator sitings: Implications for social movement theory." Social
Problems v40, n1 (February 1993): 25-39.
This article examines two siting disputes involving modern incinerators
and asks why one was eventually built and the other defeated.
V. LEGAL AND LAW REVIEW ARTICLES
Austin, Regina & Schill, Michael. "Black, brown, poor & poisoned:
Minority grassroots environmentalism and the quest for eco-justice:" Kansas
Journal of Law and Public Policy v1, n1 (1991): 69-82.
People of color and the poor are endangered by industrial pollution
and environmental degradation. They are organizing themselves around environmental
justice and many view their equal protection struggles as an extension
of the civil rights movement.
Babcock, Hope. Environmental justice clinics: Visible models of justice.
Stanford Environmental Law Journal v. 14, n1 (1995): 4-57.
This article examines and evaluates the contributions of environmental
justice clinics to pedagogy, law reform and legal services. The author
notes the important role that law school clinics can play in the environmental
justice movement. Observations and conclusions are based on author s experience
supervising students at Georgetown Law Center s environmental justice clinic.
Been, Vicki. "Market dynamics and the siting of LULUs: Questions to
raise in the classroom about existing research." West Virginia Law Review
v96, n4 (Summer 1994): 1069-1078.
This New York University law professor focuses on existing scholarship
on environmental justice and the distribution of locally undesirable land
uses (LULUs). Her major contention is that race-neutral "market" dynamics
may account for the disparate siting of waste facilities in people of color
communities.
_________. "What's fairness got to do with it?" Environmental justice
and the siting of locally undesirable land uses." Cornell University
Law Review v78, (1993): 1001-1085.
The author discusses who benefits and who loses with the siting of
locally unwanted land uses (LULUs), the politics involved with their siting,
and legal strategies for combating the siting of LULUs.
Binder, Denis. Index of environmental justice cases. The Urban Lawyer
v27, n1 (1995): 163-167.
The author provides an index of environmental justice cases.
Blank, Linda D. Seeking solutions to environmental inequity: The Environmental
Justice Act. Environmental Law v 24, n3 (1994): 1109-1136.
The author refers to the movement that is striving toward a solution
to the problem of environmental inequity as the environmental civil rights
movement. She provides an analysis of the Environmental Justice Act of
1992 and concludes that the right to a clean, safe environment is a fundamental
right, and legislation which reflects the urgency of the situation faced
by minority communities is needed to protect that right.
Brown, Alice L. "Environmental justice: New civil rights frontier."
Trial v29, n7 (July 1993): 48.
Traditional environmental laws do not cover racial discrimination but
can still be used to challenge the location of polluting industries and
lack of enforcement of cleanup provisions. Suits alleging this type of
discrimination can be brought under several laws. These include CERCLA,
the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights
Act and the Medicaid Act.
Bullard, Robert D. "Race and environmental justice in the United States," The Yale Journal of International Law v18, n1 (Winter 1993): 319-335.
__________. "Environmental racism and 'invisible' communities." West
Virginia Law Review v96, n4 (Summer 1994): 1037-1050.
Institutional racism continues to make many African American and other
people of color communities "invisible." This is true in housing, education,
employment, and the delivery of municipal services, including environmental
protection.
__________. "The legacy of American apartheid and environmental racism."
St. John's Journal of Legal Commentary v9, n2 (Spring 1994): 445-474.
This article examines the concept of "community" and the role of institutional
barriers in creating separate, unequal, and segregated physical environments.
Chase, Anthony. "Assessing and addressing problems posed by environmental
racism." Rutgers University Law Review v45, n2 (Winter 1993): 369-385.
Environmental racism is easy to practice, but difficult to prove. The
author draws some parallels with other forms of racial discrimination and
the remedies used to combat them.
Cole, Luke W. "Empowerment as the key to environmental protection: The
need for environmental poverty law." Ecology Law Quarterly v19,
n4 (1992): 619-683.
This article discusses the need for poverty law and environmental justice
law to merge when dealing with environmental racism issues. However, the
law is only one tool. Community empowerment is the key in disenfranchised
communities.
_________. "Environmental justice in the classroom: Real life lessons
for law students." West Virginia Law Review v96, n4 (Summer 1994):
1051-1067.
Author believes that law schools need to do a better job of preparing
students for environmental justice training. Article focuses on four main
areas where concrete steps can be made in terms of environmental justice
becoming apart of a law students academic requirement. These areas are
teaching, scholarship and research, clinical work, and work during sabbaticals.
__________. "Remedies for environmental racism: A view from the field."
(response to Rachel D. Godsil), Michigan Law Review v90, n7 (June
1992): 1991-1997.
The author critiques Rachel D. Godsil's paper on environmental racism.
Cole believes that the law has done a lousy job protecting people of color
and disenfranchised populations. For him, grassroots activism is the approach
most likely to bare fruit.
Coleman, Leslie Ann. "It's the thought that counts: The intent requirement
in environmental racism claims." St. Mary's Law Journal v25, n1
(1993): 447-492.
The author gives a brief history of racial segregation and environmental
racism. Court cases are discussed where the intent standard has been the
insurmountable hurdle. She also discusses Title VI of the Civil Rights
Act.
Collin, Robert W. "Environmental equity: A law and planning approach
to environmental racism." Virginia Environmental Law Journal v13,
n4 (Summer 1992): 495-546.
Poor communities of color have been dealing with the adverse externalities
of industrial capitalism for decades. The article delineates some of the
institutional changes that could be implemented to combat this trend.
Colopy, James H. "The road less traveled: Pursuing environmental justice
through Title VI of the Civil Rights Act 1964." Stanford Environmental
Law Journal v13, n1 (January 1994): 125-189.
This article provides a detailed and comprehensive discussion of legal
strategies for combating environmental racism using Title VI of the Civil
Rights Act.
Colquette, K.C. & Robertson, Elizabeth Henry A. "Environmental racism:
The causes, consequences and commendations." Tulane Environmental Law
Journal v5, n1 (December 1991): 153-207.
Environmental racism is alive and well in Louisiana. African Americans
who live in the petro-chemical corridor suffer the most from discriminatory
industry practices and parish policies. The article cites the example of
parish officials rezoning the all-black town of Wallace from residential
to industrial to make way for a rayon factory.
Comment: Environmental justice: The need for equal enforcement and sound
science. Journal of contemporary health law and policy v11, n1 (1994):
253-280.
Comment examines the origins of the environmental justice movement,
the controversy over the lack of scientific data to support claims of adverse
health effects caused by environmental injustice. Author also discusses
steps that can be taken to bring environmental justice advocates and the
business community together to work cooperatively in addressing environmental
justice issues.
Crawford, Colin. Strategies for environmental justice: Rethinking CERCLA
medical monitoring lawsuits. Boston University Law Review v9, n2
(1994): 267-326.
The author argues that lawyers and legal academics have disadvantaged
potential environmental justice plaintiffs through concentration on expanding
the scope of constitutional jurisprudence rather than using existing federal
environmental justice statutes. The author focuses on the medical monitoring
lawsuit available under sec. 107(a)(4)(B) of CERCLA.
Denno, Deborah, W. "Considering lead poisoning as a criminal defense."
Fordham Urban Law Journal v20, n3 (1993): 377-400.
This article bases a criminal defense strategy on a recent biosociological
study which states that lead poisoning in young black males is one of the
strongest predictors for crime and violence. This possibly establishes
an environmental link to the plight of America's young black males.
Dubin, Jon C. "From junkyards to gentrification: Explicating a right
to protective zoning in low-income communities of color." Minnesota
Law Review v77, n4 (April 1993): 739-801.
This article discusses the history of discriminatory zoning in the
United States and the effects that it had on land use patterns. It also
examines other aspects of zoning laws, from environmental to gentrification,
and calls for the use of protective zoning in disenfranchised communities.
Freeman, James & Godsil, Rachel D. The question of risk: Incorporating
community perceptions into environmental risk assessments. Fordham Urban
Law Journal v21, n3 (1994): 547-576.
This article discusses the issue of perception of risk and citizen
involvement in environmentally sensitive siting decisions. The authors
discuss the gap between citizens and government agencies understanding
of what constitutes acceptable risk, how risk is measured, and who makes
these decisions. The authors argue that public officials should give greater
weight to public perceptions of risk.
Godsil, Rachel D. "Remedying environmental racism." Michigan Law
Review v90, n2 (November 1991): 394-497.
One of the first law review articles to address environmental racism.
The author concludes that people of color have not been well-served by
government and industry.
Hasler, Claire L. The proposed Environmental Justice Act: I have a (green
dream). Puget Sound Law Review v 17, n2 (1994): 417-471.
This article addresses the concept of environmental racism, the tools
that have been used to fight it, and the proposed Environmental Justice
Act of 1993. The author concludes that the Act would not be effective as
written and suggests revisions in the provisions and goals of the Act.
Keeva, Steven. "A breath of justice: Along with equal employment opportunity
and voting, living free from pollution is emerging as a new civil right."
ABA Journal v80, (February 1994): 88-92.
The environmental justice movement is a bridge between the environmental
and civil rights movements. The actions of grassroots groups have placed
environmental justice issues on local, state, and national agenda.
Lavelle, Marianne & Coyle, Marcia. "Unequal protection: The racial
divide in environmental law." Special Supplement, National Law Journal
v15, n3 (September 21, 1992).
This special issue reports on the unequal protection provided to communities
of color under the federal Superfund program. The authors conclude that
white communities see faster cleanup action and more stringent cleanup
than communities of color. Penalties are stiffer on companies with violations
in white communities as compared to communities of color.
Lazarus, Richard, J. "Environmental justice and the teaching of environmental
law," West Virginia Law Review v96, n4 (Summer 1994): 1025-1036.
The author concludes that facility siting is only a symptom of environmental
injustice; environmental quality rests upon compliance which depends on
enforcement.
__________. "Pursuing 'environmental justice': The distributional effects
of environmental protection." Northwestern Law Review v87, n3 (March
1993): 787-857.
This article explores the effect of unequal protection on vulnerable
populations and the role of environmental justice in correcting these inequalities.
Lyskowski, Kevin. "Environmental justice: A research guide." Our
Earth Matters. NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund (Spring 1994).
This guide is filled with topics and sources on environmental justice
including cases, legislation, and bibliographic materials. It also has
a fairly comprehensive list of print and "on-line" (computer) resources
with keywords for searches.
Macchianola, Frank J. "The courts in the political process: Judicial
activism or timid local government?" St. John's Journal of Legal Commentary
v9, n2 (Spring 1994): 703-724.
Discusses how timid executive and legislative government is based on
fear of fulfilling their responsibilities because of unpopular political
positions. In response to New York City's environmental racism problem
the article discusses: the sewage treatment, ocean dumping of solid waste,
housing discrimination, and the homeless debate.
Mank, Bradford C. Environmental justice and discriminatory siting: Risk-based
representation and equitable compensation. Ohio State Law Journal
v56, n2 (1995): 329-425.
The author argues that the siting of a polluting or disposal facility
brings both costs and benefits to any community, and minority communities
may lose opportunities for economic gain if legislative measures designed
to reduce environmental inequities also reduce the incentive for businesses
to relocate in poor and minority areas. The article proposes a new risk-based
approach to representing and compensating persons affected by siting decisions
to empower the local residents most affected.
Mata, Rodolfo. Hazardous waste facilities and environmental equity:
A proposed siting model. Virginia Environmental Law Journal v13,
n3 (1994): 375-467.
This article posits that state siting processes are ill-suited to produce
environmentally equitable results. Accordingly, the article proposes a
state siting scheme that addresses environmental equity, with the goal
of distributing hazardous waste facilities in a more equitable manner.
Mitchell, Carolyn M. "Environmental racism: Race as a primary factor
in the selection of hazardous waste sites." National Black Law Journal
v12, n3 (Winter 1993): 176-188.
The location of waste facilities violates the 1866 Civil Rights Act
and the Equal Protection Guarantees of the Fourteenth Amendment because
of the racial and ethnic makeup of the communities. Several state environmental
and personal injury laws also mitigate against such racially discriminatory
location of hazardous sites and operations.
Reich, Peter L. "Greening the ghetto: A theory of environmental race
discrimination." The University of Kansas Law Review v41, n2 (Winter
1992): 271-314.
This article discusses the inadequacies of federal doctrines in protecting
communities of color and suggests that state doctrines could possibly be
used to combat environmental racism.
Saleem, Omar. Overcoming environmental discrimination: The need for
a disparate impact test and improved notice requirements in facility siting
decisions. Columbia Journal of Environmental Law v19, n2 (1994):
211-249.
This article explores the phenomenon of environmental discrimination
within the spectrum of current laws and policies and posits that such laws
and policies are narrowly construed to the detriment of their intended
beneficiaries. The author examines the shortcomings of the Equal Protection
Clause s discriminatory intent requirement, as well as the shortcomings
of federal and state notice requirements for siting hazardous waste facilities.
Topper, Martin D. "Environmental protection in Indian country: Equity
or self-determination." St. John's Journal of Legal Commentary v9,
n2 (Spring 1994): 693-702.
Discusses the current position of Native Americans. The author's stand-point
is that as American citizens, Native Americans have the benefits and rights
as all other citizens of the U.S. These benefits and rights are not forfeited
simply because the tribal governments have jurisdiction over their lands
and people.
Tsao, Naikang. "Ameliorating environmental racism: A citizens' guide
to combating the discriminatory siting of toxic waste dumps." New York
University Law Review v67, n2 (May 1992): 366-418.
The author discusses legal remedies communities may pursue to prevent
the development of new toxic waste sites in their communities. Racial discrimination
is analogous to any municipal service and remedies exist in common law,
state law or constitutional law. Federal cases based upon equal protection
of the 14th Amendment would probably not succeed in the present federal
courts, so state laws are the better approach.
Weinberg, Peter. Environmental protection in the next decades: Moving
from cleanup to prevention. Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review v.27,
n3 (1994): 1145-1156.
Author argues for more environmental regulation coupled with incentives
to encourage environmentally benign activity and waste reduction, because
of the inadequacy of market forces to end environmental abuses. Author
also analyzes the need for international controls, expansion of alternatives
to litigation in resolving environmental issues and the necessity of transcending
the not in my backyard (NIMBY) view to address environmental equity.
VI. BOOKS, MONOGRAPHS, REPORTS, AND SPECIAL ISSUES
Alston, Dana. We Speak for Ourselves: Social Justice, Race &
Environment. The Panos Institute, December 1990. 40 pp.
This booklet documents the marriage of the movement for social justice
with environmentalism. Contributors range from journalists, writers, illustrators,
researchers, and artists. Issues covered include environment and people
of color, land, sovereignty and the environment, organizing, and the media
and the environment.
Angel, Bradley. The Toxic Threat to Indian Lands: A Greenpeace Report.
1992. 17 pp.
This Greenpeace report details the targeting of Native lands for landfills,
incinerators, and other waste facilities.
Barry, Tom & Sims, Beth. The Challenge of Cross Border Environmentalism:
The U.S. - Mexico Case No. 1 in the U.S. - Mexico Series. The Inter-Hemispheric
Education Resource Center, Resource Center Press and border ecology Project.
1994. 121 pp.
A review of the political agenda and recommendations are presented
for NAFTA's side agreements are presented. The authors argue that small-scale
models forming at the grassroots level, combined with progressive binational
politics could provide a basis for sustainable development in the border
region.
Belliveua, Michael; Kent, M. & Rosenblum B. Richmond at Risk:
Community Demographics and Toxic Hazards from Industrial Polluters.
San Francisco: Citizens for a Better Environment, 1989.
This study examines the communities living closest to Richmond, CA
petrochemical corridor. The city's African American and Latino citizens
live closest to the polluting industries.
Brueggemann, Martin R. Environmental Racism in Our Own Backyard:
Solid Waste Disposal in Holly Springs, North Carolina. Chapel, Hill,
NC: Master's Thesis for the University of North Carolina School of Journalism,
1993. 96 pp.
This thesis examined the siting of solid waste disposal facilities
in a North Carolina community. African American residents in Wake County
bear a greater burden for disposal of the area's waste.
Bryant, Bunyan & Mohai, Paul. Race and the Incidence of Environmental
Hazards: A Time for Discourse. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1992a.
251 pp.
This book inclues the papers that were delivered at a 1990 University
of Michigan Conference by the same name. The core presenters, people of
color scholars, civil rights leaders, and environmental justice activists,
became the ad hoc group known as the "Michigan Coalition."
Burke, Lauretta M. Environmental Equity in Los Angeles. National
Center for Geographic Information & Analysis, Technical Report 93-6
(July 1993). 82 pp.
In a case study of L.A., the relationship between industrial facilities
emitting toxic chemicals and demographic variables are examined at the
census tract-level of aggregation. Because race and income are highly correlated,
the purpose of this analysis is to determine the significance of race in
relationship to environmental pollution when the effects of other important
variables, such as income, have been removed.
Bullard, Robert D. ed. Unequal Protection: Environmental Justice
and Communities of Color. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1994. 392
pp.
This edited volume documents environmental injustice and unequal protection.
Case studies are from "impacted" citizens, grassroots activists, civil
rights leaders, journalists, lawyers, and academicians who have worked
in communities of color.
__________. Dumping in Dixie: Race, Class and Environmental Quality.
2nd ed. Boulder: Westview Press, 1994. 195 pp.
African American communities in the South have become the dumping ground
for polluting industries, waste facilities, and garbage dumps. The author
examines five African American communities that challenged unjust, unfair,
and illegal industry and government practices.
__________. People of Color Environmental Groups Directory 1994-95.
Flint, MI: Charles Stewart Math Foundation, 1994. 194 pp.
This is an update of the 1992 directory. The updated version profiles
over 300 people of color groups in the U.S. and another one hundred or
so in Canada and Mexico. It also lists environmental, civil rights, legal,
and health groups that work on environmental justice.
__________. Confronting Environmental Racism: Voices from the Grassroots.
Boston: South End Press, 1993. 259 pp.
This book grew out of grassroots activists and environmental justice
leaders who participated in the 1991 First National People of Color Environmental
Leadership Summit. The contributors conclude that environmental racism
endangers public health, lowers property values, and creates nonsustainable
communities.
__________. Invisible Houston: The Black Experience in Boom and Bust.
College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press, 1987. 160 pp.
This book examines the social, economic, political, and environmental
conditions of the largest African American community in the South. Numbering
over a half million, this Houston African American community remained "invisible"
and became the dumping groups for the city's household garbage.
Canadian Environmental Network. The Green List: A Guide to Canadian
Environmental Organizations and Agencies. Ottawa, Ont.: The Canadian
Network, 1994. 425 pp.
This directory includes listings on Canadian environmental groups,
development groups, industry associations, government contacts, and Southern
networks.
Center for Investigative Reporting and Bill Moyer. Global Dumping
Ground: The International Trade in Hazardous Waste. Washington, DC:
Seven Locks Press, 1990. 152 pp.
This book examines problems associated with transboundary shipment
of hazardous wastes from the United States to the Third World. A companion
video narrated by Bill Mire can be ordered with this book.
Duncan, David James. "The War for Norman's River" Sierra (May
1998): 44-55.
This report is about a group of river lovers who are fighting to keep
the Blackfoot River in Montana clean from a proposed cyanide heap-gold
mine that is upstream.
Environmental Health Coalition. Toxic-Free Neighborhoods Community
Planning Guide. San Diego: Environmental Health Coalition, 1993. 97
pp.
This guide offers solutions to toxic problems faced by neighborhoods
across the United States. The report discusses environmental racism, creating
a toxic-free neighborhood ordinance, pollution prevention, legal tools,
and organizing strategies.
Fitton, Laura J. A Study of the Correlation between the Siting of
Hazardous Waste Facilities and Racial and Socioeconomic Characteristics.
Ithaca, NY: Master's thesis, Cornell University (December 1992).
This master's thesis uses zip codes to document the national trends
of hazardous waste disposal facilities. The author finds that both race
and socioeconomic status are related to facility location.
Fordham Urban Law Journal. Urban Environmental Justice. Special
Issue v20, n3 (1993). 320 pp.
This issue includes some excellent papers from the symposium. Both
academic and grassroots presenters provide wide-ranged discussions of environmental
justice and legal challenges.
Geddicks, Al. The New Resource Wars: Native and Environmental Struggles
Against Multinational Corporations. Boston: South End Press, 1993.
250 pp.
University of Wisconsin (La Crosse) sociologist Al Geddicks provides
an historical analysis of the assaults upon native peoples and the environment
from James Bay, Quebec, to the Equadoran rain forest.
Goldman, Benjamin & Fitton, Laura J. Toxic Waste and Race Revisited.
Washington, DC: Center for Policy Alternatives, NAACP, United Church of
Christ Commission for Racial Justice, 1994. 10 pp.
This follow-up study to the 1987 Toxic Wastes and Race reveals that
people of color are more likely to live near waste sites than they were
in 1987.
Goldman, Benjamin. The Truth about Where You Live: An Atlas for Action
on Toxins and Morality. New York: Random House, 1992. 416 pp.
This book contains some informative maps, graphs, and statistical tables
that point to clear links between quality of life and geographic location;
where you live can affect your health.
Gottlieb, Robert, Forcing the Spring: The Transformation of the American
Movement. Washington, DC: Island Press, 1993. 432 pp.
The author examines the history of the environmental movement and its
redefinition that has emerged from environmental justice battles of low-income
communities of color.
Greenberg, Michael & Anderson, Richard, F. Hazardous Waste Sites:
The Credibility Gap. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Center for
Urban Policy Research, 1984. 276 pp.
This book examines hazardous waste sites in New Jersey. The authors
found that a disproportionately large share of low-income persons and people
of color lived near the waste disposal sites.
Hernandez, Richard & Sanchez, Edith. Cross-Border Links: A Directory
of Organizations in Canada, Mexico, and the United States. Albuquerque:
Inter-Hemispheric Education Resource Center, 1992. 263 pp.
This resource directory includes American, Mexican, and Canadian groups
that are working on such areas as fair trade, labor, and the environment.
It also has listings of advocacy organizations, academic institutions,
government agencies, business groups, and electronic networking.
Hofrichter, Richard, ed., Toxic Struggles: The Theory and Practice
of Environmental Justice. Philadelphia: New Society Publishers, 1993.
260 pp.
This book examines how grassroots struggles by people of color, women
migrant farm workers, and industrial workers are joining forces with environmental
activists to challenge corporate polluters. It examines the multi-issue
and multicultural coalitions that have revitalized the political landscape
around environmental justice. Essays reflect the diversity of the environmental
justice alliance by addressing environmental racism, ecofeminism, occupational
health and safety, and the exploitation of Third world peoples.
Howe, Peter J. "Environment Group Tracks Toxic Waste with Web Page."
Boston Globe (April 17, 1998): E12.
The report is about the use of a webpage to locate industrial toxic
waste emitters that are near people?s residents.
Institute for Southern Studies. Southern Exposure, Special Issue,
"People of Color Forge a Movement for Environmental Justice,. v21, n4 (Winter
1993). 64 pp.
This special issue is dedicated to environmental justice. Articles
include such issues as lead poisoning in West Dallas, Du Pont fungicide
killing crops in Florida, private resorts eroding the coast in South Carolina,
and pollution along the U.S. - Mexico border and the North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA).
Johnson, Barry L., Williams, Robert C. & Harris, Cynthia M. Proceedings
of the 1990 National Minority Health Conference: Focus on Environmental
Contamination. Princeton, NJ: Scientific Publishing Co., Inc., 1992.
244 pp.
The First National Minority Health Conference was held in Atlanta,
Georgia in 1990. Papers explore the nature, extent, and impact of environmental
hazards on persons of color and other vulnerable populations.
Land Use Forum. "Environmental Equity: Confronting racial injustice in land use patterns." Special Issue, Land Use Forum. Constituting Education of the Bar of California, v2, n1 (Winter, 1993). 91 pp. The articles examine the relationship between unpopular land use and communities of color, and look at emerging efforts to correct the disparity: There is also a list of resources and organizations active in environmental justice issues.
Lavelle, Marian & Coyle, Marcia. "Unequal protection: the racial
divide on environmental law." National Law Journal, September 21,
1993.
This special supplement examines the differential treatment of communities
of color under EPA's giant Superfund program. The authors conclude that
white communities receive quicker action and more comprehensive clean-up
strategies than communities of color when income is held constant.
Lewis, Stanford Keating, & Russell, Dick. Inconclusive by Design:
waste, fraud and abuse in Federal Environmental Health Research. Boston:
National Tonics Campaign, 1992. 55 pp.
This report takes the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
to task for inconclusive findings and wasteful health assessments of residents
who live around Superfund sites.
Louisiana Advisory Committee to the United States Commission of Civil
Rights, The Battle for Environmental Justice in Louisiana... Government,
Industry, and the People. Kansas City: U.S. Commission on Civil Rights
Regional Office (September 1993). 144 pp.
This report offers, for the first time, information for the U.S. Commission
on Civil Rights linking environmental practices and policies with racial
discrimination. The study shows that black communities in the corridor
between Baton Rouge and New Orleans, known as Cancer Alley" are disproportionately
impacted by state and local government systems for permitting and expansion
of hazardous waste and chemical facilities.
Mann, Eric. L.A.'s Lethal Air: New Strategies for Policy, Organizing
& Action. A Labor/Community Strategy Book. Los Angeles, 1991. 80
pp.
This report discusses air pollution in Los Angeles and its effect upon
poor communities of color. It also documents the corporate sources of the
problem and discusses the Labor/Community Watchdog strategy for fighting
against environmental racism.
McAllum, M. Recreational and Subsistence Catch and Consumption of
Selected Seafood from Three Urban Industrial Bays of Puget Sound: Port
Gardner, Elliot Bay, and Sinclair Inlet. Olympia, WA: Washington State
Department of Health, 1985.
The study found that toxic fish consumption is a greater problem for
Native Americans and other people of color than whites who live near Puget
Sound.
Natural Resources & Environment "Facility Siting," Section
of Natural Resources, Energy and Environmental Law. American Bar Association
v7, n3 (Winter 1993). 64 pp.
This issue contains a diverse collection of articles to assist anyone
interested in facility siting. "The Use of Zoning and Other Local Controls
for Siting Solid and Hazardous Waste Facilities," "Site Selection for Hazardous
Waste Facilities," "Long Arm of Uncle Sam: Federal Environmental Issues
in Siting Decisions," and other articles.
Puffer, H. Consumption Rates of Potentially Hazardous Marine Fish
Caught in the Metropolitan Los Angeles Area. Washington, DC: U.S. EPA
(Grant #R807-120010), 1981. 44 pp.
This report clearly correlates toxic fish consumption in the Los Angeles
metro area with race. People of color fishers are more likely to eat fish
taken from polluted waters than their white counterparts.
Race, Poverty & the Environment, "Environmental justice and
the law." Special Legal Issue v5, n2/3 (Fall/Winter 1995). 64 pp.
This special issue examines legal issues and strategies groups are
using to achieve environmental justice. The issue includes articles on
legal challenges to toxics, facility siting, land use, high voltage lines,
hog farming, organizing, SLAPP suits, and other areas of interest.
__________. "Peace Now." Special Military Conversion Issue, v4, n4 (Spring-Summer 1994). 48 pp. This special issue addresses a variety of environmental issues including indigenous perspectives, military conversion and labor, use of national labs, community needs and Restoration Advisory Boards or RABs.
_________. "Latinos and the environment." Special Issue v4, n3 (Fall
1994). 48 pp.
This issue of RPE is devoted to Latinos and contains some excellent
articles that address issues ranging from Puerto Ricans in New York to
Chicanos in East Los Angeles. The volume contains a good mix of articles
from environmental justice activists and academics.
Sevrens, Gail. Environmental, Health, and Housing Needs and Nonprofit
Groups in the U.S. - Mexico Border Area. Arlington, VA: World Environment
Center. (June 1992). 187 pp.
This directory contains mostly health and housing nonprofit groups
located along the U.S.-Mexico border.
Sexton, Ken & Anderson, Yolanda Banks. "Equity in Environmental
Health: Research Issues and Needs." Special Issue, Toxicology and Industrial
Health v9, n5 (September-October, 1993). 967 pp.
This special issue grew out of papers presented at a workshop on environmental
health issues. The workshop was sponsored by the U.S. WPA, National Institute
for Environmental Health Sciences, and the Agency for Toxic Substances
and Disease Registry. Ten articles are presented on topics ranging from
research and decision making, health status by race and class, data collection,
susceptibility, community perspectives and health research needs, health
risks from air and water pollution and hazardous wastes.
Social Problems, Special Issue on Environmental Justice. v40,
n1 (February 1993).
This issue contains some interesting research and case studies from
the field.
Southwest Organizing Project. Intel Inside New Mexico: A Case Study
of Environmental and Economic Injustice. Albuquerque: SWOP, 1995. 158
pp.
This is an important case study of the micro-electronics industry in
New Mexico. It clearly shows that environmental justice and economic justice
are one and the same. SWOP's position is that economic development models
must address sustainablity and justice concerns of local communities.
St. John's Journal of Legal Commentary, "Environmental Justice:
The Merging of Civil Rights and Environmental Activism." Symposium, v9,
n2 (Spring 1994). 873 pp.
This issue includes papers from the symposium. Articles are from some
of the leading academics and activists in the field. Papers cover a range
of topics including residential apartheid, environmental racism, market
dynamics, unequal enforcement and protection, causes of action and the
need for new legislation, sovereignty and Native American issues, Superfund
reform, and legal remedies.
Surface Transportation Policy Project, Transportation: Environmental
Justice and Social Equity Conference Proceedings. Washington, DC: STPP
(July, 1995). 91 pp.
This report is from a November, 1994 conference held in Chicago. The
meeting brought together some 150 groups, community leaders, and government
officials to address environmental justice and social equity concerns detailed
in the Environmental Justice Executive Order 12898.
Szasz, Andrew. EcoPopulism: Toxic Waste and the Movement for Environmental
Justice. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1994. 216 pp.
The author discusses how, in less than a decade, a rich infrastructure
of increasingly more permanent social organizations has emerged around
environmental justice issues, including municipal waste, military toxics,
and pesticides. He follows the development of the movement in the world
of "official" policymaking in Washington as well as through the formation
of local, grassroots groups in America's polluted neighborhoods. The author
suggests that the movement may prove to be the vehicle for reinvigorating
progressive politics.
Texas Environmental Equity and Justice Task Force Report. Recommendations
to the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission. Austin, Texas.
(August 1993). 4 pp.
The purpose of this task force was to ensure that the public benefits
from the newly created state agency. This was one of the first statewide
task forces to examine the impact of environmental policies, regulations,
and laws on low-income communities and communities of color.
Texas Network for Environmental and Economic Justice. Toxics in Texas
& Their Impact on Communities of Color. Austin, Texas: Texas Center
for Policy Studies. (March 1993). 41 pp.
This preliminary report is intended to serve as an organizing and educational
tool for community leaders and policy makers who are addressing environmental
justice and economic development issues across the state of Texas. According
to the data, gathered from demographics of hazardous facilities and industries,
communities of color in Texas are disproportionately impacted.
United Church of Christ Commission for Racial Justice, Toxic Wastes
and Race in the United States: A National Report on the Racial and Socioeconomic
Characteristics of Communities with Hazardous Waste Sites. New York:
Commission for Racial Justice, 1987. 234 pp.
This was the first national study to document the correlation between
waste facility siting and race. Using multiple regression analysis, the
study found race to be the most potent predictor (stronger than class,
property values, land values) of the location of waste sites in the United
States.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA Journal. "Environmental
Protection: Has It Been Fair?" Special Issue, v18, n1 (March/April 1992).
64 pp.
This special issue contains a wide range of short articles that explore
the issues of environmental and economic justice, differential exposure,
facility siting disparities, and initiatives begun at EPA to address some
of these concerns.
__________. OSWER Environmental Justice Action Agenda. Washington,
DC: Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response, EPA540/R-95/057 (May
1995). 65 pp.
This document is part of a report series that details the environmental
justice actions of EPA's OSWER program. OSWER by far has been the most
active EPA program area when its comes to environmental justice initiatives.
__________. Waste Programs Environmental Justice Accomplishments
Report. Washington, DC: OSWER EPA540/R-95/057 (May 1995). 221 pp.
This report details the specific environmental justice initiatives
undertaken by EPA's OSWER. Among the categories listed in this 221-page
report include actions on Title VI of the Civil rights Act, health and
cumulative risk, GIS, outreach, economic development, grants and contracts,
interagency cooperation, Native American and tribal issues, and training.
__________. Environmental Justice 1994 Annual Report: Focusing on
Environmental Protection for All People. Washington, DC: U.S. EPA.
(April 1995). 60 pp.
This annual report details the accomplishments of EPA's Office of Environmental
Justice via Executive Order 12898 and provides profiles of environmental
justice initiatives in each EPA region.
__________. OSWER Environmental Justice Task Force Draft Final Report.
Washington, D.C.: U.S. EPA Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response,
1994. 68 pp.
This report was produced by EPA s Office of Solid Waste and Emergency
Response (OSWER) to guide its environmental justice efforts on the reauthorization
of Superfund. Some of the core recommendations from grassroots groups are
incorporated in OSWER s action plan.
__________. Toxic Release Inventory & Emission Reductions 1987-1990
in the Lower Mississippi River Industrial Corridor. Washington, D.C.:
U.S. EPA Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics, 1993.
Using geographic information system and Toxic Release Inventory data,
the EPA mapped the pollution levels along the Mississippi River from Baton
Rouge to New Orleans. Not Surprisingly, the EPA study found that African
American communities along the river bear the greatest risk burden from
industrial pollution.
__________. Environmental Equity: Reducing Risk for All Americans.
Washington, D.C. : U.S. EPA, 1992. v1, 43 pp. v2, 130 pp.
This report was issued after a year-long study of environmental justice
problems. While stopping short of recognition of environmental racism,
the report does provide recommendations and action steps to begin addressing
some of the nation s environmental inequities.
U.S. General Accounting Office, Siting of Hazardous Waste Landfills
and Their Correlation with Racial and Economic Status of Surrounding Communities.
Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1983. 13 pp.
This Congressional report was prompted by the 1982 protests over the
Warren County, North Carolina PCB landfill. The study findings show that
three of the four offsite hazardous waste landfills in Region IV (eight
states in the South) were located in predominately black communities.
West Virginia Law Review, v96, n4 (Summer 1994). 218 pp.
This law review issue contains a dozen articles that address some aspect
of environmental justice, environmental equity, environmental racism, LULUs
and facility siting, networking, and teaching environmental law and environmental
justice.
Yale Journal of International Law, "Earth Rights and Responsibilities:
Human Rights and Environmental Protection." Symposium, v18, n1 (Winter
1993). 411 pp.
This volume grew out of an international conference held at Yale Law
School. The papers address such topics as biotic rights, human rights and
environmental rights, codes of corporate responsibility, race and the environment,
Native American and indigenous rights, and international treaties. >