Environment and Social Justice: An International Perspective Vol: 18


Product Details
Format:
Hardback
ISBN:
9780857241832
Published:
Publisher:
Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Dimensions:
504 pages - 156 x 234 x 41mm
Series:
Research in Social Problems and Public Policy
List price £124.99 List price €181.99 List price $229.99

Categories:

Categories:
This volume examines domestic and international environmental issues from an environmental justice perspective. The book is a compilation of original research articles and is divided into six parts. Articles in Part I focus on urban environmental issues and sustainability including Central Park's influence on historical and contemporary models of funding public parks, London's community-based efforts to deliver affordable fresh food to the poor and the relationship between sustainable living, green consumption and social justice concerns in an ecovillage in New York. Part II concentrates on water resources and the hazards of toxic fish consumption. Part III features food security, agriculture and land loss. Energy and the theme of land and resource loss in host communities is the focus in Part IV. It discusses the poverty that is pervasive in communities hosting extractive oil and gas installations and the industry and attitudes towards it in rural Trinidad and Nigeria. Part V employs spatial analyses techniques to examine siting and toxic releases and Part VI examines diversity and environmental attitudes and presents findings of national studies and environmental conflicts.

List of Contributors.Introduction.Equity, influence, and access: Central Park's role in historical and contemporary urban park financing.Movements, neighborhood change, and the media – Newspaper coverage of anti-gentrification activity in the San Francisco Bay Area: 1995–2005.Food security and sustainability: Community food initiatives in London.Sustainable living and community building in Ecovillage at Ithaca: The challenges of incorporating social justice concerns into the practices of an ecological cohousing community.The domestic and international dimensions of methylmercury contamination in Tuna: An analysis of the efficacy of the fish advisory standards of two federal agencies.Fish consumption and environmental justice in the great lakes: The influence of fish advisories on risk perception, knowledge, and behavior of white and minority anglers.From the green revolution to the gene revolution in India: Understanding the risks and benefits of genetically modified crops.Heritage tourism: A mechanism to facilitate the preservation of black family farms.Environmental perceptions and action: villagers’ response to oil and gas drilling in the wetlands of rural Trinidad.Oil and gas industry in Nigeria: The paradox of the black gold.Building community capacity? Mapping the scope and impacts of EPA’S environmental justice small grants program.Race, gender, and faculty diversity in environmental disciplines.Why can't they work together? A framework for understanding conflict and collaboration in two environmental disputes in Southeast Michigan.Environmentalism and Islam: A Study of Muslim women in the United States.Concluding Remarks.Research in Social Problems and Public Policy.Research in Social Problems and Public Policy.Copyright page.

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