Toxic wastes and race at twenty: why race still matters after all of these years
Table Of Contents
Project Abstract
This research project delves into the persistent issue of toxic wastes and race, examining why race continues to play a significant role in environmental injustice even two decades after initial awareness. The study incorporates a multidisciplinary approach, drawing on insights from environmental sociology, critical race theory, and public health to provide a comprehensive analysis of the complex interactions between race, toxic waste disposal, and environmental policies. By conducting a thorough review of existing literature and incorporating empirical data analysis, this research aims to uncover the underlying mechanisms that perpetuate racial disparities in toxic waste exposure and environmental decision-making processes. Through a historical lens, the project explores the roots of environmental racism and its enduring legacy, shedding light on how past discriminatory practices continue to shape present-day environmental conditions in marginalized communities. Furthermore, the research investigates the role of institutional factors, such as government policies and industry practices, in perpetuating environmental inequalities based on race. By highlighting case studies and examples from different regions, the study underscores the diverse manifestations of environmental racism and the varying impacts on communities of color. Moreover, the research project seeks to explore potential strategies and policy interventions to address the intersection of race and toxic waste disposal effectively. By engaging with community stakeholders and policymakers, the study aims to contribute to ongoing efforts to promote environmental justice and racial equity in toxic waste management. Overall, this research project underscores the importance of recognizing and addressing the enduring significance of race in environmental decision-making processes and advocates for inclusive and equitable environmental policies that prioritize the well-being of all communities, regardless of race or socioeconomic status.
Project Overview
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</p><p>In 1987 the United Church of Christ’s (UCC) Commission for Racial Justice published its landmark report Toxic Wastes and Race in the United States. The report documented disproportionate environmental burdens facing people of color and low-income communities across the country</p><p>. The report sparked a national grassroots environmental justice movement and significant academic and governmental attention. In 2007, the UCC commissioned leading environmental justice scholars for a new report, Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty: Grassroots Struggles to Dismantle Environmental Racism in the United States. In addition to commemorating and updating the 1987 report, the new report takes stock of progress achieved over the last twenty years. ∗ Robert D. Bullard directs the Environmental Justice Resource Center at Clark Atlanta University. His most recent book is entitled</p><p><strong>GROWING SMARTER: ACHIEVING LIVABLE COMMUNITIES, ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE, AND REGIONAL EQUITY (2007). ∗∗</strong></p><p>Paul Mohai is a Professor in the School of Natural Resources and Environment, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He has been a major contributor to the growing body of quantitative research examining disproportionate environmental burdens in low-income and people of color communities. ∗∗∗ Robin Saha is an Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies at the University of Montana and affiliated faculty with its School of Public and Community Health Sciences.</p><p>He is among the leading scholars conducting quantitative studies of environmental inequality using Geographic Information Systems (GIS). ∗∗∗∗ Beverly Wright directs the Deep South Center for Environmental Justice at Dillard University. She is one of the nation’s leading environmental justice scholars and is a Hurricane Katrina survivor.</p><p><strong>GAL.BULLARD.W FIGURES AND TABLES 5/29/2008 3:21:07 PM 372</strong></p><p><strong>ENVIRONMENTAL LAW</strong></p><p><strong>[Vol. 38:371 Although Toxic Wastes and Race has had tremendous positive impacts, twenty years after its release people of color and low-income communities are still the dumping grounds for all kinds of toxins.</strong></p><p><strong>Using 2000 Census data, an updated database of commercial hazardous waste facilities, and newer methods that better match where people and hazardous sites are located, we found significant racial and socioeconomic disparities persist in the distribution of the nation’s hazardous wastes facilities. We demonstrate that people of color are more concentrated around such facilities than previously shown.</strong></p><p><strong>People of color are particularly concentrated in neighborhoods and communities with the greatest number of facilities and racial disparities continue to be widespread throughout the country. Moreover, hazardous waste host neighborhoods are composed predominantly of people of color. Race continues to be the predominant explanatory factor in facility locations and clearly still matters.</strong></p><p><strong>Yet getting government to respond to the needs of low-income and people of color communities has not been easy, especially in recent years when the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has mounted an all-out attack on environmental justice principles and policies established in the 1990s. Environmental injustice results from deeplyembedded institutional discrimination and will require the support of concerned individuals, groups, and organizations from various walks of life.</strong></p><p><strong>The Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty report condensed in this Article provides dozens of recommendations for action at the federal, state, and local levels to help eliminate the disparities. The report also makes recommendations for nongovernmental organizations and industry. More than one hundred environmental justice, civil rights, human rights, faith based, and health allies signed a letter endorsing these steps to reverse recent backsliding, renewing the call for social, economic, and environmental justice for all. Congress has begun to listen and take action.</strong></p>
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