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Environmental Justice: A Very Short Introduction

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Environmental justice recognizes that environmental benefits and burdens should be distributed fairly, and that the people making policy decisions should incorporate the views of those most often harmed: people of color, Indigenous populations, low-income communities, and those who are underserved and disenfranchised for other reasons such as age, gender, or disability. It encompasses not only traditional environmental issues like clean air and clean water, but also social issues such as employment, nutrition, and access to health care. Although environmental justice is a relatively recent concept, it has become a focus of governmental environmental policy, UN actions, and the activities of many nongovernmental environmental organizations. Its development tracks our growing understanding of racism and wealth disparity in the US and elsewhere, and of our understanding of inequality between the Global North and the Global South. In the era of climate change, climate justice is a particular focus.

In an engaging and approachable way, Environmental Justice: A Very Short Introduction defines the concept, identifies specific environmental justice populations, examines root causes, including racism, capitalism, and colonialism, and traces the history of the environmental justice movement and governmental responses to it. It concludes with suggestions for achieving this elusive goal.

Author: Hill Pamela
Publisher: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 168
ISBN: 9780197630136
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2026

Acknowledgements
List of illustrations
1 What is environmental justice?
2 Environmental justice populations
3 Causes of environmental injustice
4 The environmental justice movement
5 The role of government in the United States and in other countries
6 Environmental justice as an international issue
7 Climate justice
8 Can there be environmental justice?
References
Further reading
Index

Pamela Hill is an environmental lawyer and former Deputy Regional Counsel at the United States Environmental Protection Agency's New England Regional Office, with extensive experience as a career senior attorney at the USEPA. She is a lecturer in environmental law at Boston University School of Law and has also taught environmental law at Northeastern University School of Law.

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