|
Product Description
This much anticipated follow-up to Dr. Robert D. Bullard’s highly acclaimed Unequal Protection: Environmental Justice and Communities of Color captures the voices of frontline warriors who are battling environmental injustice and human rights abuses at the grassroots level around the world, and challenging government and industry. policies and globalization trends that place people of color and the poor at special risk.
Part I presents an overview of the early environmental justice movement and highlights key leadership roles assumed by women activists. Part II examines the lives of people living in sacrifice zones”toxic corridors (such as Louisiana’s infamous Cancer Alley”) where high concentrations of polluting industries are found. Part III explores land use, land rights, resource extraction, and sustainable development conflicts, including Chicano struggles in America’s Southwest. Part IV examines human rights and global justice issues, including an analysis of South Africa’s legacy of environmental racism and the corruption and continuing violence plaguing the oil-rich Niger Delta.
Together, the diverse contributors to this much-anticipated follow-up anthology present an inspiring and illuminating picture of the environmental justice movement in the first decade of the twenty-first century.
Part I presents an overview of the early environmental justice movement and highlights key leadership roles assumed by women activists. Part II examines the lives of people living in sacrifice zones”toxic corridors (such as Louisiana’s infamous Cancer Alley”) where high concentrations of polluting industries are found. Part III explores land use, land rights, resource extraction, and sustainable development conflicts, including Chicano struggles in America’s Southwest. Part IV examines human rights and global justice issues, including an analysis of South Africa’s legacy of environmental racism and the corruption and continuing violence plaguing the oil-rich Niger Delta.
Together, the diverse contributors to this much-anticipated follow-up anthology present an inspiring and illuminating picture of the environmental justice movement in the first decade of the twenty-first century.
Features
- Used Book in Good Condition
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Epitaph for a Peach: Four Seasons on My Family Farm
- Race, Place, and Environmental Justice After Hurricane Katrina: Struggles to Reclaim, Rebuild, and Revitalize New Orleans and the Gulf Coast
- Dumping In Dixie: Race, Class, And Environmental Quality, Third Edition
- Fresh Fruit, Broken Bodies: Migrant Farmworkers in the United States (California Series in Public Anthropology)
- Confronting Environmental Racism: Voices From the Grassroots
- Toxic Communities: Environmental Racism, Industrial Pollution, and Residential Mobility
- Water Wars: Privatization, Pollution, and Profit
- From the Ground Up: Environmental Racism and the Rise of the Environmental Justice Movement (Critical America)
- Silent Spring
- The Environmental Justice Reader: Politics, Poetics, and Pedagogy
*If this is not the "The Quest for Environmental Justice: Human Rights and the Politics of Pollution" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Dec 27, 2024 11:06 +08.