| Environmental Justice and Regional Inequality in Southern California: Implications for Future Research Rachel Morello-Frosch,1 Manuel Pastor Jr.,2
Carlos Porras,3 and James Sadd4 1College of Health and Human Services, San Francisco State
University, Sat Francisco, California, USA; 2Center for Justice,
Tolerance and Community, University of California, Santa Cruz, California,
USA; 3Communities for a Better Environment, Huntington Park,
California, USA; 4Environmental Sciences, Occidental College,
Los Angeles, California, USA Abstract Environmental justice offers researchers new insights into the juncture of social inequality and public health and provides a framework for policy discussions on the impact of discrimination on the environmental health of diverse communities in the United States. Yet, causally linking the presence of potentially hazardous facilities or environmental pollution with adverse health effects is difficult, particularly in situations in which diverse populations are exposed to complex chemical mixtures. A communityacademic research collaborative in southern California sought to address some of these methodological challenges by conducting environmental justice research that makes use of recent advances in air emissions inventories and air exposure modeling data. Results from several of our studies indicate that communities of color bear a disproportionate burden in the location of treatment, storage, and disposal facilities and Toxic Release Inventory facilities. Longitudinal analysis further suggests that facility siting in communities of color, not market-based "minority move-in," accounts for these disparities. The collaborative also investigated the health risk implications of outdoor air toxics exposures from mobile and stationary sources and found that race plays an explanatory role in predicting cancer risk distributions among populations in the region, even after controlling for other socioeconomic and demographic indicators. Although it is unclear whether study results from southern California can be meaningfully generalized to other regions in the United States, they do have implications for approaching future research in the realm of environmental justice. The authors propose a political economy and social inequality framework to guide future research that could better elucidate the origins of environmental inequality and reasons for its persistence. Key words: air toxics , cancer , environmental justice , risk , social inequality , treatment, storage, and disposal facilities. Environ Health Perspect 110(suppl 2) :149154 (2002) . http://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2002/suppl-2/149-154morello-frosch/abstract.html The full version of this article is available for free in HTML or PDF formats. |