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Description

The emerging environmental justice movement has created greater awareness among scholars that communities from all over the world suffer from similar environmental inequalities. This volume takes up the challenge of linking the focussed campaigns and insights from African American campaigns for environmental justice with the perspectives of this global group of environmentally marginalized groups. The editorial team has drawn on Washington's work, on Paul Rosier's study of Native American environmentalism, and on Heather Goodall's work with Indigenous Australians to seek out wider perspectives on the relationships between memories of injustice and demands for environmental justice in the global arena. This collection contributes to environmental historiography by providing "bottom up" environmental histories in a field which so far has mostly emphasized a "top down" perspective, in which the voices of those most heavily burdened by environmental degradation are often ignored. The essays here serve as a modest step in filling this lacuna in environmental history by providing the viewpoints of peoples and of indigenous communities which traditionally have been neglected while linking them to a global context of environmental activism and education.

Scholars of environmental justice, as much as the activists in their respective struggle, face challenges in working comparatively to locate the differences between local struggles as well as to celebrate their common ground. In this sense, the chapters in this book represent the opening up of spaces for future conversations rather than any simple ending to the discussion. The contributions, however, reflect growing awareness of that common ground and a rising need to employ linked experiences and strategies in combating environmental injustice on a global scale, in part by mimicking the technology and tools employed by global corporations that endanger the environmental integrity of a diverse set of homelands and ecologies.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Foreword
Chapter 2 Introduction
Part 3 Foundations and Origins of Environmental Injustice
Chapter 4 1.Class and Environmental Justice
Chapter 5 2.Gendered Approaches to Environmental Justice: An American Sampler
Chapter 6 3.Fond Memories and Bitter Struggles: Concerted Resistance to Environmental Injustices in Post-War Native America
Chapter 7 4.My Soul Looked Back: Environmental Memories of the African in America, 1600-2000
Chapter 8 5.Indigenous Peoples, Colonialism and Memories of Environmental Injustice
Chapter 9 6.Racist Property Holdings and Environmental Coalitions: Addressing Memories of Environmental Injustice
Chapter 10 7.Racialized Spaces & the Emergence of Environmental Injustice
Part 11 North American Memories of Environmental Injustice
Chapter 12 8.Wadin' in the Water: African American Migrant Struggles for Environmental Equality in Cleveland, Ohio, 1928-1970
Chapter 13 9.Memories of (no)Place: Homelessness and Environmental Justice
Chapter 14 10.Citizens Against Wilderness: Environmentalism and the Politics of Marginalization in the Great Smoky Mountains
Chapter 15 11.Urban Renewal and Environmental Justice in New York City
Chapter 16 12.Ferrell Parkway: Conflicting Views of Nature in a Mixed Use Community
Chapter 17 13.We Come this Far by Faith: Memories of Race, Religion and Environmental Disparity
Part 18 Indigenous Memories of Environmental Injustice
Chapter 19 14.Suttesája - From a Sacred Sami Site and Natural Spring to a Water Bottling Plant? The Effects of Colonization in Northern Europe
Chapter 20 15.What Lies Beneath? Cultural Excavation in Neocolonial Martinique
Chapter 21 16.Plight of the Rara'muri: Crises in Our Backyard
Chapter 22 17.Main Streets and Riverbanks: The Politics of Place in an Australian River Town
Chapter 23 18.Taking Us For Village Idiots: Two Stories of Ethnicity, Class and Toxic Waste from Sydney, Australia
Chapter 24 The Mirrar Fight for Jabiluka: Uranium Mining and Indigenous Australians to 2004
Chapter 25 20.Guardians of the Land: A Maori Community's Environmental Battles
Chapter 26 21.Local History and the Legitimation of Protest in Taipei
Chapter 27 22.Remembering the Mother River: The Impact of Environmental Injustice on National Identity in Contemporary China
Chapter 28 23.Environmental Justice and Popular Protest in Thailand
Chapter 29 "Aiee, our fields will be destroyed": Dubious Science and Peasant Environmental Practices in Madziwa, Zimbabwe
Chapter 30 25.Shell International, the Ogoni People and Environmental Injustice in the Niger Delta, Nigeria: The Challenge of Securing Environmental Justice in an Oil-based Economy
Chapter 31 26.The Community, Industry and the Quest for a Clean Vaal River 1997-2004
Chapter 32 Epilogue

Product details

Published Mar 07 2006
Format Ebook (Epub & Mobi)
Edition 1st
Extent 458
ISBN 9780739154472
Imprint Lexington Books
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

Sylvia Hood Washington

Anthology Editor

Heather Goodall

Anthology Editor

Paul Rosier

Contributor

Four Arrows

Contributor

Marja K. Bulmer

Contributor

Lois Gibbs

Contributor

Peggy James

Contributor

Jacqui Katona

Contributor

Rauna Kuokkanen

Contributor

Bill E. Lawson

Contributor

Pataka Moore

Contributor

Paul C. Rosier

Contributor

Jane Sayers

Contributor

Rachael Selby

Contributor

Phia Steyn

Contributor

Julie Sze

Contributor

Guy Thompson

Contributor

Nancy Unger

Contributor

John Walsh

Other primary creator

Jeffrey Stine

Related Titles

Environment: Staging