Toxic Wastes and Race and Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty
The Toxic Wastes and Race and Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty reports are the landmark study and follow-up study that demonstrated a direct correlation between the placement of toxic waste facilities and communities of poverty and/or color. This first report was the ground breaking study from which the term “environmental racism” was coined. Today, legislation and court cases refer to this term when addressing environmental issues of race and discrimination.
The Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty is available in Printable PDF form below:
Complete Report
Contents and Summary
Introduction
Chapter 1: Environmental Justice in the Twenty First Century
Chapter 2: Environmental Justice Timeline/Milestones 1987-2007
Chapter 3: Racial and Socioeconomic Disparities in the Distribution of Environmental Hazards
Chapter 4: A Current Appraisal of Toxic Wastes and Race in the United States – 2007
Chapter 5: Impact of the Toxic Wastes and Race on the EJ Movement
Chapter 6: Wrong Complexion for Protection
Chapter 7: The “Poster Child” for Environmental Racism in 2007: Dickson, Tennessee
Chapter 8: Conclusions and Recommendations
To learn more about the larger movement that led to the initial report on Toxic Wastes and Race, read “A Movement Is Born: Environmental Justice and the UCC.”