Description

Book Synopsis
A new approach to environmental justice and its equitable distribution.

Trade Review

In this excellent and balanced examination of the growth and future of the environmental justice movement, Rhodes (Indiana Univ. School of Public and Environmental Affairs) examines the background against which environmental justice issues are viewed. The roots of the environmental movement were in wilderness preservation, and even today, some environmental groups resist concerning themselves with what they regard as social policies and urban problems. Minorities had more pressing priorities. But now, a paradigm shift is occurring and the pivotal pioneering voices, such as Robert Bullard's, are being heard. Diversity in both membership and leadership of environmental groups is slowly increasing. Access to information about toxic waste facilities has improved, while the increase in pollution is now more visible. This book argues that the time has come when all the various factors have reached a critical mass. In the future, agencies must more explicitly address in their policies how actions and decisions about the environment will differentially affect increasingly segmented populations. The myth that minorities do not care about the environment is disappearing as communities become empowered by awareness and inclusion in decision-making processes. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels.July 2003

-- S. E. Wiegand * Saint Mary's College *

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments
Part I. The Dynamics of Environmental Justice
1. Introduction
2. Forms of Environmental Justice
3. What Has Gone Before: Why Race Was Not on the Original Environmental Agenda
4. The Evolution of Environmental Justice as a Policy Issue: A Movement Whose Time Has Come
5. Misconceptions about Minority Attitudes toward Environmental Issues
6. The EPA: An Agency with an Attitude
Part II. Policy Analysis of Environmental Justice
7. Environmental Justice through the Lens of Policy Analysis: Why Should Government Get Involved?
8. The Measurement of Environmental Justice: Some Rules of Engagement
9. A New Way of Looking at the Same Old Numbers: Using Data Envelopment Analysis to Evaluate Environmental Quality
Part III. A Case, a Summary, and Some Conclusions
10. A Case of Environmental Justice: The Disposal of Hazardous Material in Noxubee County, Mississippi
11. Policy Directions and Recommendations
12. Environmental Justice: A New Paradigm—A Time of Change
Appendix A: Principles of Environmental Justice
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Environmental Justice in America A New Paradigm

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A Paperback / softback by Edwardo Lao Rhodes


    View other formats and editions of Environmental Justice in America A New Paradigm by Edwardo Lao Rhodes

    Publisher: Indiana University Press
    Publication Date: 15/02/2005
    ISBN13: 9780253217745, 978-0253217745
    ISBN10: 253217741

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    A new approach to environmental justice and its equitable distribution.

    Trade Review

    In this excellent and balanced examination of the growth and future of the environmental justice movement, Rhodes (Indiana Univ. School of Public and Environmental Affairs) examines the background against which environmental justice issues are viewed. The roots of the environmental movement were in wilderness preservation, and even today, some environmental groups resist concerning themselves with what they regard as social policies and urban problems. Minorities had more pressing priorities. But now, a paradigm shift is occurring and the pivotal pioneering voices, such as Robert Bullard's, are being heard. Diversity in both membership and leadership of environmental groups is slowly increasing. Access to information about toxic waste facilities has improved, while the increase in pollution is now more visible. This book argues that the time has come when all the various factors have reached a critical mass. In the future, agencies must more explicitly address in their policies how actions and decisions about the environment will differentially affect increasingly segmented populations. The myth that minorities do not care about the environment is disappearing as communities become empowered by awareness and inclusion in decision-making processes. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels.July 2003

    -- S. E. Wiegand * Saint Mary's College *

    Table of Contents

    Preface and Acknowledgments
    Part I. The Dynamics of Environmental Justice
    1. Introduction
    2. Forms of Environmental Justice
    3. What Has Gone Before: Why Race Was Not on the Original Environmental Agenda
    4. The Evolution of Environmental Justice as a Policy Issue: A Movement Whose Time Has Come
    5. Misconceptions about Minority Attitudes toward Environmental Issues
    6. The EPA: An Agency with an Attitude
    Part II. Policy Analysis of Environmental Justice
    7. Environmental Justice through the Lens of Policy Analysis: Why Should Government Get Involved?
    8. The Measurement of Environmental Justice: Some Rules of Engagement
    9. A New Way of Looking at the Same Old Numbers: Using Data Envelopment Analysis to Evaluate Environmental Quality
    Part III. A Case, a Summary, and Some Conclusions
    10. A Case of Environmental Justice: The Disposal of Hazardous Material in Noxubee County, Mississippi
    11. Policy Directions and Recommendations
    12. Environmental Justice: A New Paradigm—A Time of Change
    Appendix A: Principles of Environmental Justice
    Notes
    Bibliography
    Index

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