Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Darlene Grant , L. Downey , Mary Nell Trautner , Lisa Thiebaud
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) University of Arizona, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs, University of Buffalo
ANO 2010
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO American Sociological Review
ISSN 0003-1224
E-ISSN 1939-8271
EDITORA JSTOR (United States)
DOI 10.1177/0003122410374822
CITAÇÕES 19
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 b0a1ee0b28cbff74054735d63a861fc0

Resumo

Environmental justice scholars have suggested that because chemical plants and other hazardous facilities emit more pollutants where they face the least resistance, disadvantaged communities face a special health risk. In trying to determine whether race or income has the bigger impact on a neighborhood's exposure to pollution, however, scholars tend to overlook the facilities themselves and the effect of their characteristics on emissions. In particular, how do the characteristics of facilities and their surrounding communities jointly shape pollution outcomes? We propose a new line of environmental justice research that focuses on facilities and how their features combine with communities' features to create dangerous emissions. Using novel fuzzy-set analysis techniques and the EPA's newly developed Risk-Screening Environmental Indicators, we test the influence of facility and community factors on chemical plants' health-threatening emissions. Contrary to the idea that community characteristics have singular, linear effects, findings show that facility and community factors combine in a variety of ways to produce risky emissions. We speculate that as chemical firms experiment with different ways of producing goods and externalizing pollution costs, new 'recipes of risk' are likely to emerge. The question, then, will no longer be whether race or income matters most, but in which of these recipes do they matter and how.

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