Jump to main content
US EPA
United States Environmental Protection Agency
Search
Search
Main menu
Environmental Topics
Laws & Regulations
About EPA
Health & Environmental Research Online (HERO)
Contact Us
Print
Feedback
Export to File
Search:
This record has one attached file:
Add More Files
Attach File(s):
Display Name for File*:
Save
Citation
Tags
HERO ID
7315277
Reference Type
Book/Book Chapter
Title
Equity, unnatural man-made disasters, and race: Why environmental justice matters
Author(s)
Bullard, RD
Year
2007
Publisher
Emerald
Location
Bingley, United Kingdom
Book Title
Equity and the environment
Page Numbers
51-85
Language
English
DOI
10.1016/S0196-1152(07)15002-X
Web of Science Id
WOS:000276772800003
Abstract
This chapter chronicles some of the early years of the author growing up in the racially segregated South Alabama and its influence on his thinking about race, environment, social equity, and government responsibility and his journey to becoming an environmental sociologist, scholar, and activist. Using an environmental justice paradigm, he uncovers the underlying assumptions that contribute to and produce unequal protection. The environmental justice paradigm provides a useful framework for examining and explaining the spatial relation between the health of marginalized populations and their built and natural environment, and government response to natural and man-made disasters in African American communities. Clearly, people of color communities have borne a disproportionate burden and have received differential treatment from government in its response to health threats such as childhood lead poisoning, toxic waste and contamination, industrial accidents, hurricanes, floods and related weather-related disasters, and a host of other man-made disasters. The chapter brings to the surface the ethical and political questions of "who gets what, why, and how much" and why some communities get left behind before and after disasters strike.
Editor(s)
Freudenburg, WR
Series
Research in Social Problems and Public Policy, vol. 15
ISBN
9780762314171
Home
Learn about HERO
Using HERO
Search HERO
Projects in HERO
Risk Assessment
Transparency & Integrity