Environmental Racism Essay

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    The United States Environmental Protection Act (hereinafter referred to as EPA) defines environmental justice as ‘’the fair treatment and meaningful involvement of all people, regardless of race, colour, national origin or income with respect to the development, implementation and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations, and policies’’ (Bullard 2005, 4). Throughout the world, poor people and people of colour, who have the least political power and who are the most marginalized, are selectively

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    groups at higher risk of being uninsured, limited access to care, facing a poorer quality of care, and overall negative health outcomes. The high incidence of health disparities reflects the range of individual, social, economic, racial/ethnic and environmental magnitudes. Among the minority groups, African-Americans disproportionately access health care and the health disparities clearly glow in the nationwide. Purpose of the Study The purpose of this research is to identify and measure the most common

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    Lincolnville Landfill

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    This is problematic and should undeniably be changed, as landfills are huge pollution hazards and should unquestionably have routinely environmental assessments. Landfill proponents followed the letter of the law/regulations however they did not follow the spirit of public participation where they actively consult residents and give them the opportunity to say ‘no’. Residents did express nuance account of the siting process where the proponents used jargon to further sustain the racial and socio-economic

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    The gentrification of Chinatowns across the United States represent an environmental racism, because it forces people of of their homes on the streets. Most of the Chinatowns are located in the centers of the majors cities, surrounded by financial districts, and other rich neighborhoods. With current economy trends we can see an increase of new companies moving and opening new offices around different towns. With limited space available for new companies to open their business, landlords sell their

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    I read Tatum's "Defining Racism" and Bonilla-Silva's "The Style of Color Blindness". The "White Fragility in the Workplace" video (with sarcasm) shows that the White people are hurt when making a racial claim, and/or when called to be "racist" ("the r-word"). I think this video relates well to "The Style of Color Blindness". The people in the study "avoids racist terminology and preserves its mythological nonracialism through semantic moves such as 'I am not a racist, but...' 'some of my best friends

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    Racism In Racism

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    What is racism? Racism is the discrimination of a person based on their race and is integrated in institutional systems. Throughout history, people of color have been discriminated. They have been treated as animals. They have been segregated from one another. They have been stereotyped negatively. Racism against minorities have been emphasized through individual actions and institutional systems, such as in the United States policies. These institutional systems involve topics, such as segregation

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    Environmental disasters are often pushed into regions with a higher rate of marginalized groups; relating to race, class, and gender. The dangerous environmental issues that these groups face hinder their progress in the fight for equality, oppressing them and hurting the environment even more. Environmental racism is a problem that many have to face, trapping people in a cycle of poverty and making it so they can’t escape environmental disasters that bring health issues with them. There are high

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    In the film, Trouble in Water Kim and Scott recorded their experience in how they dealt with Katerina. They refused to leave their home in order to acquire environmental justice for the poor treatment black communities were receiving. With little equipment and an unstable home, they protected themselves from the storm. Just as the couple predicted, the government had no interest in rescuing their community, let them to fend for themselves. Her husband and other people in the community had to become

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    Americans began to question the possibility of racism being a deciding factor in the fate of many New Orleans citizens who were black and who lived in the poorest, most low-lying portion of the city, the Ninth Ward. Many, including First Lady Laura Bush, denounce critics who say race played a role in the federal government's slow response to the victims of Katrina. While it is possible that the government's slow response to the disaster was not directly due to racism, there are many unanswered questions suggesting

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    Steamboat Sociology

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    Her work concerning the environmental racism in Los Angeles discusses white privilege and how it functions on a systematic level (Pulido). Race is one of those social myths that we’ve been told for so long that it has become a social reality, one that is situated throughout academic,

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