Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review

"[A]n important contribution to an EJ literature...it should be widely used there in courses on US environmental history, the history of race and environment, and even on social movements in the twentieth century."

* Environmental History *

"[A] powerful tool for introducing students to the US environmental justice movement and the sometimes tense relationship between environmentalism and social justice."

* New Books Network *

Table of Contents

Foreword: The Age of Environmental Inequality / Paul S. Sutter
Acknowledgments
Introduction

PART 1 THE NATURE OF SEGREGATION
“WHERE WE LIVE”
Russell Lee, Shack of Negro Family Farmers Living near Jarreau, Louisiana, 1938
John Vachon, Backed Up Sewer in Negro Slum District, Norfolk, Virginia, 1941
Carl Mydans, Kitchen of Negro Dwelling in Slum Area near House Office Building, Washington, D.C., 1935
Dorothea Lange, Migratory Mexican Field Worker’s Home on the Edge of a Frozen Pea Field, Imperial Valley, California, 1937
Home Owners Loan Corporation, Los Angeles Data Sheet D52, 1939
John Vachon, Negro Children Standing in Front of Half Mile Concrete Wall, Detroit, Michigan, 1941
Examples of Racially Restrictive Real Estate Covenants
Arthur S. Siegel, Detroit, Michigan. Riot at the Sojourner Truth Homes, a New U.S. Federal Housing Project, Caused by White Neighbors’ Attempt to Prevent Negro Tenants from Moving In, 1942
Craig Thompson, “Growing Pains of a Brand-New City,” 1954
Norris Vitchek, “Confessions of a Block-Buster,” 1962
Civil Rights March on Washington, D.C., 1963
Fair Housing Protest, Seattle, Washington, 1964
Fair Housing Act of 1968
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, “Understanding Fair Housing,” 1973

“WHERE WE WORK”
Ruby T. Lomax, [Cotton Picking Scenes on Roger Williams Plantation in the Delta, New Drew, Mississippi], 1940
John Vachon, Steel Mill Workers, Bethlehem Company, Sparrows Point, Maryland, 1940
Help Wanted White Only
Lloyd H. Bailer, “The Negro Automobile Worker,” 1943
Navajo Miners Work at the Kerr-McGee Uranium Mine at Cove, Ariz., 1953
Mildred Pitts Walter, “Biographical Sketch,” September 28, 2017
Civil Rights Act of 1964, Title VII: Equal Employment Opportunity
Lyndon B. Johnson, Commencement Address at Howard University: “To Fulfill These Rights,” 1965“
Exhibit 1 in City of Memphis vs. Martin Luther King, Jr.,” 1968

“WHERE WE PLAY”
Victor H. Green, ed., Introduction, The Negro Motorist Green Book: 1950
Lewis Mountain Entrance Sign, Shenandoah National Park
Colored Only Sign
Mayor and City Council of Baltimore City v. Dawson, 1955
Civil Rights Demonstration at Fort Lauderdale’s Segregated Public Beach, 1961
Jackson NAACP Branches to City and State Officials, May 12, 1963

PART 2 A MORE INCLUSIVE ENVIRONMENTALISM? FROM EARTH DAY TO ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
A NEW CIVIL RIGHTS CRITIQUE
Indians of All Tribes, “The Alcatraz Proclamation,” 1969
Timothy Benally, “‘So a Lot of the Navajo Ladies Became Widows’”
El Malcriado, “Growers Spurn Negotiations on Poisons,” 1969
Wilbur L. Thomas Jr., “Black Survival in Our Polluted Cities,” 1970

RACE, ENVIRONMENTALISM, AND ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE
Edmund S. Muskie, Speech at the Philadelphia Earth Week Rally, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, April 22, 1970
EPA Task Force on the Environmental Problems of the Inner City, Our Urban Environment and Our Most Endangered People, 1971
John H. White, Chicago Ghetto on the South Side, 1974
Don Coombs, “The [Sierra] Club Looks at Itself,” 1972

TOXICS, WARREN COUNTY, AND THE DOCUMENTATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL DISPARITIES
Penelope Ploughman, Protest Signs in Front Yard Love Canal 99th Street Home, 1978
Protest Sign: Danger, Dioxin Kills, 1980
Robert T. Stafford, “Why Superfund Was Needed,” 1981
Jenny Labalme, Anti-PCB Protests in Warren County, North Carolina, 1982
“A Warren County PCB Protest Song,” 1982
General Accounting Office, “Siting of Hazardous Waste Landfills and Their Correlation with Racial and Economic Status of Surrounding Communities,” 1983
Cerrell Associates, Political Difficulties Facing Waste-to-Energy Conversion Plant Siting, 1984
United Church of Christ, “Toxic Wastes and Race in the United States,” 1987
United Church of Christ, “Fifty Metropolitan Areas with Greatest Number of Blacks Living in Communities with Uncontrolled Waste Sites,” 1987
Marianne Lavelle and Marcia Coyle, “Unequal Protection,” 1992

BUILDING THE MOVEMENT
Sam Kittner, The Great Louisiana Toxics March, 1988
Peggy Shepard and Chuck Sutton Protest New York City’s North River Sewage Treatment Plant, 1988
SouthWest Organizing Project, “Letter to Big Ten Environmental Groups,” March 16, 1990
Mark Gutierrez, From One Earth Day to the Next, 1990
Indigenous Environmental Network, “Unifying Principles,” 1991
First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit Press Conference, October 24, 1991
Dana Alston, “Moving beyond the Barriers,” 1991
“The Principles of Environmental Justice,” 1991
William K. Reilly, “Environmental Equity,” 1992
Melissa Healy, “Administration Joins Fight for ‘Environmental Justice’ Pollution,” 1993
William J. Clinton, Executive Order 12898, February 16, 1994
Dorceta E. Taylor, “Women of Color, Environmental Justice, and Ecofeminism,” 1997
Luz Claudio, “Standing on Principle”
“Jemez Principles for Democratic Organizing,” 1996
Public Citizen, “NAFTA’s Broken Promises,” 1997

PART 3 THE ENVIRONMENT AND JUSTICE IN THE SUSTAINABILITY ERA
INSTITUTIONAL LEGACIES
Richard Moore, “Government by the People”
Christine Todd Whitman, “Memorandum,” August 9, 2001
Second People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit, “Principles of Working Together,” 2002
Robert D. Bullard et al., “Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty,” 2007
Marty Durlin, “The Shot Heard Round the West,” 2010
Environmental Protection Agency, “Plan EJ 2014,” 2011
Kristen Lombardi, Talia Buford, and Ronnie Greene, “Environmental Justice, Denied,” 2015

CONTINUING EJ ACTIVISM
Tracy Perkins, Buttonwillow Park, CA, January 30, 2009
Tracy Perkins, Wasco, CA, January 30, 2009
Online Meme on #NoDAPL
Amy Goodman, “Unlicensed #DAPL Guards Attacked Water Protectors with Dogs & Pepper Spray,” 2016
Brian Bienkowski, “2017 and Beyond: Justice Jumping Genres,” Environmental Health News

FROM ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE TO JUSTICE AND THE ENVIRONMENT
“Bali Principles of Climate Justice,” August 29, 2002
Kathy Jetñil-Kijiner, “Rising Sea Levels,” 2016
Brentin Mock, “For African Americans, Park Access Is about More Than Just Proximity,” 2016
Norma Smith Olson, “Food Justice,” 2013
Van Jones, “Power Shift Keynote,” 2009
World Rainforest Movement, “‘For a Change of Paradigm’: Interview with Tom Goldtooth from the Indigenous Environmental Network,” 2016

Index

Environmental Justice in Postwar America

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Thu 16 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Christopher W. Wells, Paul S. Sutter

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      Publisher: University of Washington Press
      Publication Date: 16/07/2018
      ISBN13: 9780295743691, 978-0295743691
      ISBN10: 0295743697

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review

      "[A]n important contribution to an EJ literature...it should be widely used there in courses on US environmental history, the history of race and environment, and even on social movements in the twentieth century."

      * Environmental History *

      "[A] powerful tool for introducing students to the US environmental justice movement and the sometimes tense relationship between environmentalism and social justice."

      * New Books Network *

      Table of Contents

      Foreword: The Age of Environmental Inequality / Paul S. Sutter
      Acknowledgments
      Introduction

      PART 1 THE NATURE OF SEGREGATION
      “WHERE WE LIVE”
      Russell Lee, Shack of Negro Family Farmers Living near Jarreau, Louisiana, 1938
      John Vachon, Backed Up Sewer in Negro Slum District, Norfolk, Virginia, 1941
      Carl Mydans, Kitchen of Negro Dwelling in Slum Area near House Office Building, Washington, D.C., 1935
      Dorothea Lange, Migratory Mexican Field Worker’s Home on the Edge of a Frozen Pea Field, Imperial Valley, California, 1937
      Home Owners Loan Corporation, Los Angeles Data Sheet D52, 1939
      John Vachon, Negro Children Standing in Front of Half Mile Concrete Wall, Detroit, Michigan, 1941
      Examples of Racially Restrictive Real Estate Covenants
      Arthur S. Siegel, Detroit, Michigan. Riot at the Sojourner Truth Homes, a New U.S. Federal Housing Project, Caused by White Neighbors’ Attempt to Prevent Negro Tenants from Moving In, 1942
      Craig Thompson, “Growing Pains of a Brand-New City,” 1954
      Norris Vitchek, “Confessions of a Block-Buster,” 1962
      Civil Rights March on Washington, D.C., 1963
      Fair Housing Protest, Seattle, Washington, 1964
      Fair Housing Act of 1968
      U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, “Understanding Fair Housing,” 1973

      “WHERE WE WORK”
      Ruby T. Lomax, [Cotton Picking Scenes on Roger Williams Plantation in the Delta, New Drew, Mississippi], 1940
      John Vachon, Steel Mill Workers, Bethlehem Company, Sparrows Point, Maryland, 1940
      Help Wanted White Only
      Lloyd H. Bailer, “The Negro Automobile Worker,” 1943
      Navajo Miners Work at the Kerr-McGee Uranium Mine at Cove, Ariz., 1953
      Mildred Pitts Walter, “Biographical Sketch,” September 28, 2017
      Civil Rights Act of 1964, Title VII: Equal Employment Opportunity
      Lyndon B. Johnson, Commencement Address at Howard University: “To Fulfill These Rights,” 1965“
      Exhibit 1 in City of Memphis vs. Martin Luther King, Jr.,” 1968

      “WHERE WE PLAY”
      Victor H. Green, ed., Introduction, The Negro Motorist Green Book: 1950
      Lewis Mountain Entrance Sign, Shenandoah National Park
      Colored Only Sign
      Mayor and City Council of Baltimore City v. Dawson, 1955
      Civil Rights Demonstration at Fort Lauderdale’s Segregated Public Beach, 1961
      Jackson NAACP Branches to City and State Officials, May 12, 1963

      PART 2 A MORE INCLUSIVE ENVIRONMENTALISM? FROM EARTH DAY TO ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
      A NEW CIVIL RIGHTS CRITIQUE
      Indians of All Tribes, “The Alcatraz Proclamation,” 1969
      Timothy Benally, “‘So a Lot of the Navajo Ladies Became Widows’”
      El Malcriado, “Growers Spurn Negotiations on Poisons,” 1969
      Wilbur L. Thomas Jr., “Black Survival in Our Polluted Cities,” 1970

      RACE, ENVIRONMENTALISM, AND ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE
      Edmund S. Muskie, Speech at the Philadelphia Earth Week Rally, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, April 22, 1970
      EPA Task Force on the Environmental Problems of the Inner City, Our Urban Environment and Our Most Endangered People, 1971
      John H. White, Chicago Ghetto on the South Side, 1974
      Don Coombs, “The [Sierra] Club Looks at Itself,” 1972

      TOXICS, WARREN COUNTY, AND THE DOCUMENTATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL DISPARITIES
      Penelope Ploughman, Protest Signs in Front Yard Love Canal 99th Street Home, 1978
      Protest Sign: Danger, Dioxin Kills, 1980
      Robert T. Stafford, “Why Superfund Was Needed,” 1981
      Jenny Labalme, Anti-PCB Protests in Warren County, North Carolina, 1982
      “A Warren County PCB Protest Song,” 1982
      General Accounting Office, “Siting of Hazardous Waste Landfills and Their Correlation with Racial and Economic Status of Surrounding Communities,” 1983
      Cerrell Associates, Political Difficulties Facing Waste-to-Energy Conversion Plant Siting, 1984
      United Church of Christ, “Toxic Wastes and Race in the United States,” 1987
      United Church of Christ, “Fifty Metropolitan Areas with Greatest Number of Blacks Living in Communities with Uncontrolled Waste Sites,” 1987
      Marianne Lavelle and Marcia Coyle, “Unequal Protection,” 1992

      BUILDING THE MOVEMENT
      Sam Kittner, The Great Louisiana Toxics March, 1988
      Peggy Shepard and Chuck Sutton Protest New York City’s North River Sewage Treatment Plant, 1988
      SouthWest Organizing Project, “Letter to Big Ten Environmental Groups,” March 16, 1990
      Mark Gutierrez, From One Earth Day to the Next, 1990
      Indigenous Environmental Network, “Unifying Principles,” 1991
      First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit Press Conference, October 24, 1991
      Dana Alston, “Moving beyond the Barriers,” 1991
      “The Principles of Environmental Justice,” 1991
      William K. Reilly, “Environmental Equity,” 1992
      Melissa Healy, “Administration Joins Fight for ‘Environmental Justice’ Pollution,” 1993
      William J. Clinton, Executive Order 12898, February 16, 1994
      Dorceta E. Taylor, “Women of Color, Environmental Justice, and Ecofeminism,” 1997
      Luz Claudio, “Standing on Principle”
      “Jemez Principles for Democratic Organizing,” 1996
      Public Citizen, “NAFTA’s Broken Promises,” 1997

      PART 3 THE ENVIRONMENT AND JUSTICE IN THE SUSTAINABILITY ERA
      INSTITUTIONAL LEGACIES
      Richard Moore, “Government by the People”
      Christine Todd Whitman, “Memorandum,” August 9, 2001
      Second People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit, “Principles of Working Together,” 2002
      Robert D. Bullard et al., “Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty,” 2007
      Marty Durlin, “The Shot Heard Round the West,” 2010
      Environmental Protection Agency, “Plan EJ 2014,” 2011
      Kristen Lombardi, Talia Buford, and Ronnie Greene, “Environmental Justice, Denied,” 2015

      CONTINUING EJ ACTIVISM
      Tracy Perkins, Buttonwillow Park, CA, January 30, 2009
      Tracy Perkins, Wasco, CA, January 30, 2009
      Online Meme on #NoDAPL
      Amy Goodman, “Unlicensed #DAPL Guards Attacked Water Protectors with Dogs & Pepper Spray,” 2016
      Brian Bienkowski, “2017 and Beyond: Justice Jumping Genres,” Environmental Health News

      FROM ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE TO JUSTICE AND THE ENVIRONMENT
      “Bali Principles of Climate Justice,” August 29, 2002
      Kathy Jetñil-Kijiner, “Rising Sea Levels,” 2016
      Brentin Mock, “For African Americans, Park Access Is about More Than Just Proximity,” 2016
      Norma Smith Olson, “Food Justice,” 2013
      Van Jones, “Power Shift Keynote,” 2009
      World Rainforest Movement, “‘For a Change of Paradigm’: Interview with Tom Goldtooth from the Indigenous Environmental Network,” 2016

      Index

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