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Contents
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Dedication v
- Contents vii
- Foreword: The Age of Environmental Inequality xiii
- Acknowledgments xvii
- Introduction 1
-
PART 1: THE NATURE OF SEGREGATION
- Introduction 23
-
“WHERE WE LIVE”
- Introduction 25
- Shack of Negro Family Farmers Living near Jarreau, Louisiana, 1938 29
- Backed Up Sewer in Negro Slum District, Norfolk, Virginia, 1941 30
- Kitchen of Negro Dwelling in Slum Area near House Office Building, Washington, D.C., 1935 31
- Migratory Mexican Field Worker’s Home on the Edge of a Frozen Pea Field, Imperial Valley, California, 1937 32
- Home Owners Loan Corporation, Los Angeles Data Sheet D52, 1939 33
- Negro Children Standing in Front of Half Mile Concrete Wall, Detroit, Michigan, 1941 34
- Examples of Racially Restrictive Real Estate Covenants 36
- Detroit, Michigan. Riot at the Sojourner Truth Homes, a New U.S. Federal Housing Project, Caused by White Neighbors’ Attempt to Prevent Negro Tenants from Moving In, 1942 39
- “Growing Pains of a Brand-New City,” 1954 40
- “Confessions of a Block-Buster,” 1962 42
- Civil Rights March on Washington, D.C., 1963 49
- Fair Housing Protest, Seattle, Washington, 1964 50
- Fair Housing Act of 1968 51
- U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, “Understanding Fair Housing,” 1973 53
-
“WHERE WE WORK”
- Introduction 57
- [Cotton Picking Scenes on Roger Williams Plantation in the Delta, New Drew, Mississippi], 1940 59
- Steel Mill Workers, Bethlehem Company, Sparrows Point, Maryland, 1940 60
- Help Wanted White Only 61
- “The Negro Automobile Worker,” 1943 62
- Navajo Miners Work at the Kerr-McGee Uranium Mine at Cove, Ariz., 1953 64
- “Biographical Sketch,” September 28, 2017 65
- Civil Rights Act of 1964, Title VII: Equal Employment Opportunity 68
- Commencement Address at Howard University: “To Fulfill These Rights,” 1965 70
- “Exhibit 1 in City of Memphis vs. Martin Luther King, Jr.,” 1968 75
-
“WHERE WE PLAY”
- Introduction 77
- Introduction, The Negro Motorist Green Book: 1950 79
- Lewis Mountain Entrance Sign, Shenandoah National Park 81
- Colored Only Sign 82
- Mayor and City Council of Baltimore City v. Dawson, 1955 83
- Civil Rights Demonstration at Fort Lauderdale’s Segregated Public Beach, 1961 85
- Jackson NAACP Branches to City and State Officials, May 12, 1963 86
-
PART 2: A MORE INCLUSIVE ENVIRONMENTALISM? FROM EARTH DAY TO ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
- Introduction 89
-
A NEW CIVIL RIGHTS CRITIQUE
- Introduction 91
- Indians of All Tribes, “The Alcatraz Proclamation,” 1969 93
- “‘So a Lot of the Navajo Ladies Became Widows’”. 95
- “Growers Spurn Negotiations on Poisons,” 1969 97
- “Black Survival in Our Polluted Cities,” 1970 99
-
RACE, ENVIRONMENTALISM, AND ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE
- Introduction 105
- Speech at the Philadelphia Earth Week Rally, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, April 22, 1970 107
- EPA Task Force on the Environmental Problems of the Inner City, Our Urban Environment and Our Most Endangered People, 1971 112
- Chicago Ghetto on the South Side, 1974 118
- “The [Sierra] Club Looks at Itself,” 1972 119
-
TOXICS, WARREN COUNTY, AND THE DOCUMENTATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL DISPARITIES
- Introduction 121
- Protest Signs in Front Yard Love Canal 99th Street Home, 1978 124
- Protest Sign: Danger, Dioxin Kills, 1980 125
- “Why Superfund Was Needed,” 1981 126
- Anti-PCB Protests in Warren County, North Carolina, 1982 130
- “A Warren County PCB Protest Song,” 1982 132
- General Accounting Office, “Siting of Hazardous Waste Landfills and Their Correlation with Racial and Economic Status of Surrounding Communities,” 1983 134
- Cerrell Associates, Political Difficulties Facing Waste-to- Energy Conversion Plant Siting, 1984 137
- United Church of Christ, “Toxic Wastes and Race in the United States,” 1987 142
- United Church of Christ, “Fifty Metropolitan Areas with Greatest Number of Blacks Living in Communities with Uncontrolled Waste Sites,” 1987 149
- “Unequal Protection,” 1992 150
-
BUILDING THE MOVEMENT
- Introduction 159
- The Great Louisiana Toxics March, 1988 162
- Protest New York City’s North River Sewage Treatment Plant, 1988 163
- SouthWest Organizing Project, “Letter to Big Ten Environmental Groups,” March 16, 1990 164
- From One Earth Day to the Next, 1990 169
- Indigenous Environmental Network, “Unifying Principles,” 1991 170
- First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit Press Conference, October 24, 1991 171
- “Moving beyond the Barriers,” 1991 178
- “The Principles of Environmental Justice,” 1991 180
- “Environmental Equity,” 1992 183
- “Administration Joins Fight for ‘Environmental Justice’ Pollution,” 1993 188
- Executive Order 12898, February 16, 1994 194
- “Women of Color, Environmental Justice, and Ecofeminism,” 1997 198
- “Standing on Principle” 201
- “Jemez Principles for Democratic Organizing,” 1996 206
- Public Citizen, “NAFTA’s Broken Promises,” 1997 209
-
PART 3: THE ENVIRONMENT AND JUSTICE IN THE SUSTAINABILITY ERA
- Introduction 211
-
INSTITUTIONAL LEGACIES
- Introduction 213
- “Government by the People” 215
- “Memorandum,” August 9, 2001 217
- Second People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit, “Principles of Working Together,” 2002 220
- “Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty,” 2007 226
- “The Shot Heard Round the West,” 2010 233
- Environmental Protection Agency, “Plan EJ 2014,” 2011 238
- “Environmental Justice, Denied,” 2015 246
-
CONTINUING EJ ACTIVISM
- Introduction 251
- Buttonwillow Park, CA, January 30, 2009 252
- Wasco, CA, January 30, 2009 253
- Online Meme on #NoDAPL 254
- “Unlicensed #DAPL Guards Attacked Water Protectors with Dogs & Pepper Spray,” 2016 255
- “2017 and Beyond: Justice Jumping Genres,” Environmental Health News 258
-
FROM ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE TO JUSTICE AND THE ENVIRONMENT
- Introduction 265
- “Bali Principles of Climate Justice,” August 29, 2002 267
- “Rising Sea Levels,” 2016 273
- “For African Americans, Park Access Is about More Than Just Proximity,” 2016 277
- “Food Justice,” 2013 280
- “Power Shift Keynote,” 2009 283
- World Rainforest Movement, “‘For a Change of Paradigm’: Interview with Tom Goldtooth from the Indigenous Environmental Network,” 2016 286
- Index 291
- Weyerhaeuser Environmental Books 306
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Dedication v
- Contents vii
- Foreword: The Age of Environmental Inequality xiii
- Acknowledgments xvii
- Introduction 1
-
PART 1: THE NATURE OF SEGREGATION
- Introduction 23
-
“WHERE WE LIVE”
- Introduction 25
- Shack of Negro Family Farmers Living near Jarreau, Louisiana, 1938 29
- Backed Up Sewer in Negro Slum District, Norfolk, Virginia, 1941 30
- Kitchen of Negro Dwelling in Slum Area near House Office Building, Washington, D.C., 1935 31
- Migratory Mexican Field Worker’s Home on the Edge of a Frozen Pea Field, Imperial Valley, California, 1937 32
- Home Owners Loan Corporation, Los Angeles Data Sheet D52, 1939 33
- Negro Children Standing in Front of Half Mile Concrete Wall, Detroit, Michigan, 1941 34
- Examples of Racially Restrictive Real Estate Covenants 36
- Detroit, Michigan. Riot at the Sojourner Truth Homes, a New U.S. Federal Housing Project, Caused by White Neighbors’ Attempt to Prevent Negro Tenants from Moving In, 1942 39
- “Growing Pains of a Brand-New City,” 1954 40
- “Confessions of a Block-Buster,” 1962 42
- Civil Rights March on Washington, D.C., 1963 49
- Fair Housing Protest, Seattle, Washington, 1964 50
- Fair Housing Act of 1968 51
- U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, “Understanding Fair Housing,” 1973 53
-
“WHERE WE WORK”
- Introduction 57
- [Cotton Picking Scenes on Roger Williams Plantation in the Delta, New Drew, Mississippi], 1940 59
- Steel Mill Workers, Bethlehem Company, Sparrows Point, Maryland, 1940 60
- Help Wanted White Only 61
- “The Negro Automobile Worker,” 1943 62
- Navajo Miners Work at the Kerr-McGee Uranium Mine at Cove, Ariz., 1953 64
- “Biographical Sketch,” September 28, 2017 65
- Civil Rights Act of 1964, Title VII: Equal Employment Opportunity 68
- Commencement Address at Howard University: “To Fulfill These Rights,” 1965 70
- “Exhibit 1 in City of Memphis vs. Martin Luther King, Jr.,” 1968 75
-
“WHERE WE PLAY”
- Introduction 77
- Introduction, The Negro Motorist Green Book: 1950 79
- Lewis Mountain Entrance Sign, Shenandoah National Park 81
- Colored Only Sign 82
- Mayor and City Council of Baltimore City v. Dawson, 1955 83
- Civil Rights Demonstration at Fort Lauderdale’s Segregated Public Beach, 1961 85
- Jackson NAACP Branches to City and State Officials, May 12, 1963 86
-
PART 2: A MORE INCLUSIVE ENVIRONMENTALISM? FROM EARTH DAY TO ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
- Introduction 89
-
A NEW CIVIL RIGHTS CRITIQUE
- Introduction 91
- Indians of All Tribes, “The Alcatraz Proclamation,” 1969 93
- “‘So a Lot of the Navajo Ladies Became Widows’”. 95
- “Growers Spurn Negotiations on Poisons,” 1969 97
- “Black Survival in Our Polluted Cities,” 1970 99
-
RACE, ENVIRONMENTALISM, AND ENVIRONMENTAL GOVERNANCE
- Introduction 105
- Speech at the Philadelphia Earth Week Rally, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, April 22, 1970 107
- EPA Task Force on the Environmental Problems of the Inner City, Our Urban Environment and Our Most Endangered People, 1971 112
- Chicago Ghetto on the South Side, 1974 118
- “The [Sierra] Club Looks at Itself,” 1972 119
-
TOXICS, WARREN COUNTY, AND THE DOCUMENTATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL DISPARITIES
- Introduction 121
- Protest Signs in Front Yard Love Canal 99th Street Home, 1978 124
- Protest Sign: Danger, Dioxin Kills, 1980 125
- “Why Superfund Was Needed,” 1981 126
- Anti-PCB Protests in Warren County, North Carolina, 1982 130
- “A Warren County PCB Protest Song,” 1982 132
- General Accounting Office, “Siting of Hazardous Waste Landfills and Their Correlation with Racial and Economic Status of Surrounding Communities,” 1983 134
- Cerrell Associates, Political Difficulties Facing Waste-to- Energy Conversion Plant Siting, 1984 137
- United Church of Christ, “Toxic Wastes and Race in the United States,” 1987 142
- United Church of Christ, “Fifty Metropolitan Areas with Greatest Number of Blacks Living in Communities with Uncontrolled Waste Sites,” 1987 149
- “Unequal Protection,” 1992 150
-
BUILDING THE MOVEMENT
- Introduction 159
- The Great Louisiana Toxics March, 1988 162
- Protest New York City’s North River Sewage Treatment Plant, 1988 163
- SouthWest Organizing Project, “Letter to Big Ten Environmental Groups,” March 16, 1990 164
- From One Earth Day to the Next, 1990 169
- Indigenous Environmental Network, “Unifying Principles,” 1991 170
- First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit Press Conference, October 24, 1991 171
- “Moving beyond the Barriers,” 1991 178
- “The Principles of Environmental Justice,” 1991 180
- “Environmental Equity,” 1992 183
- “Administration Joins Fight for ‘Environmental Justice’ Pollution,” 1993 188
- Executive Order 12898, February 16, 1994 194
- “Women of Color, Environmental Justice, and Ecofeminism,” 1997 198
- “Standing on Principle” 201
- “Jemez Principles for Democratic Organizing,” 1996 206
- Public Citizen, “NAFTA’s Broken Promises,” 1997 209
-
PART 3: THE ENVIRONMENT AND JUSTICE IN THE SUSTAINABILITY ERA
- Introduction 211
-
INSTITUTIONAL LEGACIES
- Introduction 213
- “Government by the People” 215
- “Memorandum,” August 9, 2001 217
- Second People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit, “Principles of Working Together,” 2002 220
- “Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty,” 2007 226
- “The Shot Heard Round the West,” 2010 233
- Environmental Protection Agency, “Plan EJ 2014,” 2011 238
- “Environmental Justice, Denied,” 2015 246
-
CONTINUING EJ ACTIVISM
- Introduction 251
- Buttonwillow Park, CA, January 30, 2009 252
- Wasco, CA, January 30, 2009 253
- Online Meme on #NoDAPL 254
- “Unlicensed #DAPL Guards Attacked Water Protectors with Dogs & Pepper Spray,” 2016 255
- “2017 and Beyond: Justice Jumping Genres,” Environmental Health News 258
-
FROM ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE TO JUSTICE AND THE ENVIRONMENT
- Introduction 265
- “Bali Principles of Climate Justice,” August 29, 2002 267
- “Rising Sea Levels,” 2016 273
- “For African Americans, Park Access Is about More Than Just Proximity,” 2016 277
- “Food Justice,” 2013 280
- “Power Shift Keynote,” 2009 283
- World Rainforest Movement, “‘For a Change of Paradigm’: Interview with Tom Goldtooth from the Indigenous Environmental Network,” 2016 286
- Index 291
- Weyerhaeuser Environmental Books 306