The Quest for Environmental Justice

The Quest for Environmental Justice
Title The Quest for Environmental Justice PDF eBook
Author Robert Doyle Bullard
Publisher
Total Pages 424
Release 2005
Genre Law
ISBN

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A new collection of essays capturing the voices of frontline warriors who are battling environmental injustice and human rights abuses at the grassroots level around the world.

Our Backyard

Our Backyard
Title Our Backyard PDF eBook
Author Gerald Robert Visgilio
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages 256
Release 2003
Genre Law
ISBN 9780742523630

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This collection of essays by local activists and nationally recognized scholars deals with the history, status, and dilemmas of environmental justice. These essays provide a comprehensive overview of social and political aspects associated with environmental injustices in minority and poor communities. It will provide a solid platform for dialogue between activists and policymakers or between teachers and students.

Unequal Protection

Unequal Protection
Title Unequal Protection PDF eBook
Author Robert Doyle Bullard
Publisher Random House (NY)
Total Pages 424
Release 1994
Genre Nature
ISBN

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Sixteen contributions show how environmental laws have been inconsistently applied, so that low-income communities and people of color suffer disproportionately from public health hazards. The essays describe how abuses have flourished for lack of government action and organized resistance, and document the strategies of grassroots groups on building coalitions among traditional environmentalists and social justice groups. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

Growing Smarter

Growing Smarter
Title Growing Smarter PDF eBook
Author Robert D. Bullard
Publisher MIT Press
Total Pages 429
Release 2007-01-12
Genre Architecture
ISBN 0262524708

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The smart growth movement aims to combat urban and suburban sprawl by promoting livable communities based on pedestrian scale, diverse populations, and mixed land use. But, as this book documents, smart growth has largely failed to address issues of social equity and environmental justice. Smart growth sometimes results in gentrification and displacement of low- and moderate-income families in existing neighborhoods, or transportation policies that isolate low-income populations. Growing Smarter is one of the few books to view smart growth from an environmental justice perspective, examining the effect of the built environment on access to economic opportunity and quality of life in American cities and metropolitan regions. The contributors to Growing Smarter—urban planners, sociologists, economists, educators, lawyers, health professionals, and environmentalists—all place equity at the center of their analyses of "place, space, and race." They consider such topics as the social and environmental effects of sprawl, the relationship between sprawl and concentrated poverty, and community-based regionalism that can link cities and suburbs. They examine specific cases that illustrate opportunities for integrating environmental justice concerns into smart growth efforts, including the dynamics of sprawl in a South Carolina county, the debate over the rebuilding of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, and transportation-related pollution in Northern Manhattan. Growing Smarter illuminates the growing racial and class divisions in metropolitan areas today—and suggests workable strategies to address them.

Dumping In Dixie

Dumping In Dixie
Title Dumping In Dixie PDF eBook
Author Robert D. Bullard
Publisher Avalon Publishing - (Westview Press)
Total Pages 257
Release 2008-03-31
Genre Social Science
ISBN 0813344271

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To be poor, working-class, or a person of color in the United States often means bearing a disproportionate share of the country’s environmental problems. Starting with the premise that all Americans have a basic right to live in a healthy environment, Dumping in Dixie chronicles the efforts of five African American communities, empowered by the civil rights movement, to link environmentalism with issues of social justice. In the third edition, Bullard speaks to us from the front lines of the environmental justice movement about new developments in environmental racism, different organizing strategies, and success stories in the struggle for environmental equity.

Power, Justice, and the Environment

Power, Justice, and the Environment
Title Power, Justice, and the Environment PDF eBook
Author David N. Pellow
Publisher
Total Pages 360
Release 2005
Genre Law
ISBN

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Scholars and practitioners assess the tactics and strategies, rhetoric, organizational structure, and resource base of the environmental justice movement, gauging its successes and failures and future prospects.

Confronting Environmental Racism

Confronting Environmental Racism
Title Confronting Environmental Racism PDF eBook
Author Robert D. Bullard
Publisher South End Press
Total Pages 274
Release 1993
Genre African Americans
ISBN 9780896084469

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