The Role of Geographic Scale in Monitoring Environmental Justice
- 1 August 1996
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Risk Analysis
- Vol. 16 (4) , 517-526
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1539-6924.1996.tb01097.x
Abstract
Utilizing the concept of environmental justice, this paper examines the differential burdens of toxic and hazardous waste facilities locations in low income minority communities. The association between the presence of facilities and socioeconomic characteristics of places are examined for the state of South Carolina at three different spatial scales: counties, census tracts, and census block groups. Three different types of hazardous waste/toxic facilities are also examined: Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) sites, Treatment, Storage, and Disposal sites (TSD), and inactive hazardous waste sites. At the county level, there was some association between the presence of toxic/hazardous waste facilities and race and income. In South Carolina, this translates to a disproportionate burden on White, more affluent communities in metropolitan areas, rather than low income minority communities. At both the census tract and block group levels, there is no association between race and the location of toxic/hazardous waste facilities. There are slight differences in the income levels between tracts and block groups with facilities and those without. This localized ecology of hazard sources must be expanded to include emission/discharge data in order to adequately address environmental justice issues on who bears the burdens of environmental contamination.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Race, class and environmental justiceProgress in Human Geography, 1995
- Testing for Environmental Racism: Prejudice, Profits, Political Power?Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 1995
- Distribution of Industrial Air Emissions by Income and Race in The United States: An Approach Using the Toxic Release InventoryEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1995
- Overcoming Racism in Environmental DecisionmakingEnvironment: Science and Policy for Sustainable Development, 1994
- Locally Undesirable Land Uses in Minority Neighborhoods: Disproportionate Siting or Market Dynamics?The Yale Law Journal, 1994
- Environmental Hazards, Health, and Racial Inequity in Hazardous Waste DistributionEnvironment and Behavior, 1994
- Social Equity and Environmental Risk1Risk Analysis, 1993
- Environmental Policy and Equity: The Case of SuperfundJournal of Policy Analysis and Management, 1993
- Solid Waste Sites and the Black Houston Community*Sociological Inquiry, 1983