List of figures
List of tables
Notes on contributors
Acknowledgements
1 Introduction: the worlds of environmental justiceRyan Holifield, Jayajit Chakraborty and Gordon Walker
Part I: SITUATING, ANALYSING AND THEORISING ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE 2 Historicizing the personal and the political: evolving racial formations and the environmental justice movementLaura Pulido
3 Social movements for environmental justice through the lens of social movement theoryDiane M. Sicotte and Robert J. Brulle
4 Environmental justice movements and political opportunity structuresDavid N. Pellow
5 Environmental justice and rational choice theoryWilliam M. Bowen
6 The political economy of environmental justiceDaniel Faber
7 Feminism and environmental justiceGreta Gaard
8 Opening black boxes: environmental justice and injustice through the lens of science and technology studiesGwen Ottinger
9 Procedural environmental justiceDerek Bell and Jayne Carrick
10 The recognition paradigm of environmental injusticeKyle Whyte
11 A capabilities approach to environmental justiceRosie Day
12 Vulnerability, equality and environmental justice: the potential and limits of lawSheila R. Foster
13 Environmental human rightsKerri Woods
14 Sustainability discourses and justice: towards social-ecological justiceUlrika Gunnarsson-Östling and Åsa Svenfelt
PART II: METHODS IN ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE RESEARCH 15 Spatial representation and estimation of environmental risk: a review of analytic approachesJayajit Chakraborty
16 Assessing population at risk: areal interpolation and dasymetric mappingJuliana Maantay and Andrew Maroko
17 Application of spatial statistical techniquesJeremy Mennis and Megan Heckert
18 Historical approaches to environmental justiceChristopher G. Boone and Geoffrey L. Buckley
19 The ethics of embodied engagement: ethnographies of environmental justiceCatalina de Onís and Phaedra C. Pezzullo
20 Storytelling environmental justice: cultural studies approachesDonna Houston and Pavithra Vasudevan
21 Facilitating transdisciplinary conversations in environmental justice studiesJonathan K. London, Julie Sze and Mary L. Cadenasso
22 Cumulative risk assessment: an analytic tool to inform policy choices about environmental justiceKen Sexton and Stephen H. Linder
23 A review of community-engaged research approaches used to achieve environmental justice and eliminate disparitiesSacoby Wilson, Aaron Aber, Lindsey Wright and Vivek Ravichandran
24 Participatory GIS and community-based citizen science for environmental justice actionMuki Haklay and Louise Francis
PART III: SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES IN ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE RESEARCH 25 Streams of toxic and hazardous waste disparities, politics and policyTroy D. Abel and Mark Stephan
26 Air pollution and respiratory health: does better evidence lead to policy paralysis?Michael Buzzelli
27 Water justice: key concepts, debates and research agendasLeila M. Harris, Scott McKenzie, Lucy Rodina, Sameer H. Shah and Nicole J. Wilson
28 Environmental justice and flood hazards: a conceptual framework applied to emerging findings and future research needsTimothy W. Collins and Sara E. Grineski
29 Climate change and environmental justicePhilip Coventry and Chukwumerije Okereke
30 Environmental justice and large-scale miningLeire Urkidi and Mariana Walter
31 Justice in energy system transitions: a synthesis and agendaKaren Bickerstaff
32 Transportation and environmental justice: history and emerging practiceAlex Karner, Aaron Golub, Karel Martens and Glenn Robinson
33 Food justice: an environmental justice approach to food and agricultureAlison Hope Alkon
34 Environmental crime and justice: a green criminological examinationMichael J. Lynch and Kimberly L. Barrett
35 Urban parks, gardens and greenspaceJason Byrne
36 Urban planning, community (re)development and environmental gentrification: emerging challenges for green and equitable neighbourhoodsIsabelle Anguelovski, Anna Livia Brand, Eric Chu and Kian Goh
37 Just conservation: the evolving relationship between society and protected areasMaureen G. Reed and Colleen George
PART IV: GLOBAL AND REGIONAL DIMENSIONS OF ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE RESEARCH 38 Free-market economics, multinational corporations and environmental justice in a globalized worldRuchi Anand
39 Globalizing environmental justice: radical and transformative movements past and presentLeah Temper
40 Environmental justice for a changing Arctic and its original peoplesAlana Shaw
41 Environmental injustice in resource-rich Aboriginal AustraliaDonna Green, Marianne Sullivan and Karrina Nolan
42 Environmental justice across borders: lessons from the US-Mexico borderlandsSara E. Grineski and Timothy W. Collins
43 The dawn of environmental justice?: the record of left and socialist governance in Central and South AmericaKaren Bell
44 Urban environmental (in)justice in Latin America: the case of ChileAlexis Vásquez, Michael Lukas, Marcela Salgado and José Mayorga
45 Environmental justice in Nigeria: divergent tales, paradoxes and future prospectsRhuks T. Ako and Damilola S. Olawuyi
46 Sub-imperial ecosystem management in Africa: continental implications of South African environmental injusticesPatrick Bond
47 Environmental justice and attachment to place: Australian casesDavid Schlosberg, Lauren Rickards and Jason Byrne
48 Environmental justice in South and Southeast Asia: inequalities and struggles in rural and urban contextsPratyusha Basu
49 Environmental justice in a transitional and transboundary context in East AsiaMei-Fang Fan and Kuei-Tien Chou
50 Environmental justice in Western EuropeHeike Köckler, Séverine Deguen, Andrea Ranzi, Anders Melin and Gordon Walker
51 Environmental justice in Central and Eastern Europe: mobilization, stagnation and detractionTamara Steger, Richard Filcák and Krista Harper
Index