|
|
|
Environmental justice
and health |
|
|
  |
|
| |
|
|
| |
indicates that a link is only available in Adobe Portable Document
Format.
For information about using PDF files, click
here. |
|
| |
|
|
 |
Environmental justice and health links |
|
| |
|
|
| |
9/11 Environmental Action "The environmental
issues of the disaster require open sharing of complex data
and interpretations, and a comprehensive clean up. Instead
we've gotten a cover up -- as the insurance and construction
industries seek to minimize their liabilities."
Advancing
Environmental Justice through Community-Based Participatory
Research (Environmental Health Perspectives, National
Institute of Environmental Health Sciences)
The Alliance
for Sustainable Jobs and the Environment
Be Safe Environmental Health Alliance
Center for
Health, Environment and Justice
Clean
Production Action
Coalition
of Black Trade Unionists Environmental Justice/Community Action
and Response Against Toxics Team Program
EcoNet
Environmental
Defense
Environmental
Exposure and Racial Disparities (Environmental Justice
& Health Union, 2003)
Environmental
Justice Bibliography (U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 2003)
Environmental
Justice page (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency)
Environmental
Justice Resources on the Internet (Pacific Institute)
Environmental
Research Foundation
An
Examination of Occupational Safety and Health Materials Currently
Available in Spanish for Workers as of 1999 by Marianne
P. Brown
Hispanic
Workers in the United States: An Analysis of Employment Distributions,
Fatal Occupational Injuries, and Non-Fatal Occupational Injuries
and Illnesses by Scott Richardson (2003)
Law
of Environmental Justice Update Service (American Bar
Association)
BORDER="0" NATURALSIZEFLAG="3">Louisiana
Bucket Brigade
National
Environmental Justice Advisory Council (U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency)
New York
City Environmental Justice Alliance
New York Environmental Law and Justice
Project
New
York State Cancer Incidence Maps, by ZIP Code
These maps are extremely dark; in order to read them you will
probably need to increase the brightness of your computer
screen. (New York State Department of Health)
Occupational
Health Among Latino Workers: A Needs Assessment and Recommended
Interventions by Rafael Moure-Eraso and George Friedman-Jimenez
(2003)
Public
Participation in Contaminated Communities An academic
study of how seven U.S. communities dealt with major environmental
contamination conditions (Technology and Law Program at MIT,
1999)
Reaching
Spanish-Speaking Workers and Employers with Occupational Safety
and Health Information by Tom O'Connor (2003)
Right-to-Know
Net (Free access to numerous databases, text files,
and conferences on the environment, housing, and sustainable
development.)
Safety
Is Seguridad: A Workshop Summary (National Research
Council, 2003)
Scorecard
(Environmental Defense)
Toxic
Terror: How Diamond, Louisiana Fought for the Human Right
to Breathe Clean Air (Rockridge Institute, 2005)
Unequal
Exposure To Ecological Hazards: Environmental Injustices In
The Commonwealth Of Massachusetts (Northeastern University
Philanthropy and Environmental Justice Research Project)
|
|
| |
|
|
 |
Environmental justice and health news |
|
| |
|
|
| |
Monsanto Hid Decades Of Pollution: PCBs Drenched
Alabama Town, But No One Was Ever Told Washington
Post, January 1, 2002 On the west side of Anniston, the
poor side of Anniston, the people ate dirt. They called it "Alabama
clay" and cooked it for extra flavor. They also grew berries
in their gardens, raised hogs in their back yards, caught bass
in the murky streams where their children swam and played and
were baptized. They didn't know their dirt and yards and bass
and kids -- along with the acrid air they breathed -- were all
contaminated with chemicals. They didn't know they lived in
one of the most polluted patches of America. 
Construction
Workers Get Sick Building Toxic Elementary School
A toxic elementary school in Southwest Detroit has made construction
workers sick and outraged parents whose children are scheduled
to attend the school in the fall of 2001. The new elementary
school is in a low-income, predominately African-American and
Hispanic neighborhood with a large number of Spanish-speaking
immigrants. The land where it is being built is contaminated
with arsenic, PCBs, and other cancer causing chemicals. Environmental
racism is the issue as the school district, which was taken
over by the state of Michigan in 1998, rushes to prove itself
to city residents. Viewing the residents of the Beard neighborhood
as politically and economically marginal constructing a school
on toxic land seemed possible. South-East Michigan Coalition
on Occupational Safety and Health, August 2001
|
|
| |
|
|
|