Chronicles from the Environmental Justice Frontline
Exploring the battles for environmental justice in America
J Timmons Roberts author Melissa M Toffolon-Weiss author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:24th Sep '01
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This book explores the environmental justice movement through key struggles, highlighting community resilience and the fight against systemic inequalities. Chronicles from the Environmental Justice Frontline is a vital resource.
Published in 1991, Chronicles from the Environmental Justice Frontline offers an insightful look into the environmental justice movement through four significant case studies. The authors highlight the struggles faced by communities as they confront the injustices stemming from industrial practices that disproportionately affect minorities and low-income populations. These narratives showcase how ordinary individuals mobilize to address the environmental hazards inflicted upon them, illustrating the grassroots nature of the movement.
The book details the confrontations between residents and various environmental and social justice organizations against local and state authorities and industry representatives. By examining these conflicts through historical and theoretical perspectives, Chronicles from the Environmental Justice Frontline sheds light on the systemic issues that lead to environmental injustice and the processes through which these conflicts are resolved. The stories presented serve as powerful testimonies of resilience and determination.
As the authors delve into these landmark struggles, they reveal patterns that resonate with ongoing battles across the nation. The insights gained from these cases not only inform current environmental justice efforts but also set important precedents for how national and state agencies approach similar issues. In doing so, Chronicles from the Environmental Justice Frontline remains a vital resource for understanding the complexities of environmental justice and the ongoing fight against systemic inequalities.
"Four fascinating accounts of the gutsy struggles of minority communities for a measure of environmental protection. Facing the combined power of the business and government 'growth machine' and its ability to play the intricate federal system, the communities persist, and they do not lose either. A compelling and readable book that is also sophisticated." Frances Fox Piven, The City University of New York
"This book clearly documents why Louisiana has emerged as the epicenter of a national public policy earthquake known as environmental justice. Scholars, students, activists and policymakers will find it an essential source on key controversies of the 1990s. It is especially useful in demonstrating how such battles arise, why poor communities of color are not doomed to lose them, and why the environmental justice issue will endure." Christopher H. Foreman, Jr., University of Maryland; Non-Resident Senior Fellow, Governmental Studies Program, The Brookings Institution
"This book is an excellent chronicle of the maelstrom of environmental injustices and racism in Louisiana. The authors consciously construct their work to ensure maximum authenticity of voice..." Environment
"Chronicles from the Environmental Justice Frontline takes the reader to the epicenter of U.S. struggles over environmental justice: Louisiana, America's quintessential 'pollution haven.' This is the most useful environmental justice book for use in undergraduate sociology and environmental studies courses that has been published thus far." Frederick H. Buttel, University of Wisconsin, Madison
"A fresh look at a dirty old problem of environmental injustice in Louisiana's Cancer Alley." Robert D. Bullard, Clark Atlanta University, author of Dumping in Dixie
"Chronicles from the Environmental Justice Frontline takes the reader to the epicenter of U.S. struggles over environmental justice: Louisiana, America's quintessential 'pollution haven.' This is the most useful environmental justice book for use in undergraduate sociology and environmental studies courses that has been published thus far." Frederick H. Buttel, University of Wisconsin, Madison
"This is exactly what the title proclaims, a series of reports on environmental justice battles that have taken place in the recent past around the country...a good place to get up to speed on the long and difficult effort to achieve environmental justice." Earthjustice In Brief
"In this book, Roberts and Toffolon-Weiss dig beneath the advocacy sound bites and statistics to examine four environmental justice cases as real, personal struggles of individuals for their health and the health of their communities.... All those concerned with social development should consult this book." Social Development Issues
"These authors give a particularly chilling account of the political-economic climate in Louisiana in which race and economics have always been complexly intertwine, dating back to the era of slavery." Brenda L. Murphy, Wilfrid Laurier University
ISBN: 9780521669009
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 17mm
Weight: 430g
292 pages