The body of interdisciplinary scholarship examining the causes and consequences of environmental inequality assesses both the socioeconomic determinants of toxic pollution exposure and how this exposure relates to adverse community outcomes. Although environmental justice (EJ) scholars agree that (1) inequities in pollution exposure exist by both race and class and (2) these exposures result in adverse community outcomes from both health and quality-of-life standpoints, few studies look into how patterns change over time. Our group will work closely with the SESYNC data science experts to build a cyberinfrastructure system that will both allow researchers to answer socio-temporal research questions and produce exploratory visualization—a vantage point where new discovery can occur. By creating this type of integrated cyberinfrastructure, we will gain new insights into the relationship between socially structured correlates and environmental injustice from both scholarly and actionable science points-of-view.
Resources:
Resource Title |
Brief Summary![]() |
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Measuring Environmental Inequality |
Apr 01, 2016 Article published in Ecological Economics. |
Greenhouse 100 Polluters Index (2016 Report, Based on 2014 Data) |
Apr 01, 2016 Data found on the Political Economy Research Institute (PERI) website. |
Racial disparities in pollution exposure and employment at US industrial facilities |
Oct 01, 2018 Article published in PNAS. |
A Polluting Creed: Religion and Environmental Inequality in the United States |
Jul 31, 2019 Article published in Sociological Perspectives |