Corburn Jason
Department of Urban Studies and Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge 02139, USA.
Environ Manage. 2002 Apr;29(4):451-66. doi: 10.1007/s00267-001-0013-3.
While risk assessment continues to drive most environmental management decision-making, its methods and assumptions have been criticized for, among other things, perpetuating environmental injustice. The justice challenges to risk assessment claim that the process ignores the unique and multiple hazards facing low-income and people of color communities and simultaneously excludes the local, non-expert knowledge which could help capture these unique hazards from the assessment discourse. This paper highlights some of these challenges to conventional risk assessment and suggests that traditional models of risk characterization will continue to ignore the environmental justice challenges until cumulative hazards and local knowledge are meaningfully brought into the assessment process. We ask whether a shift from risk to exposure assessment might enable environmental managers to respond to the environmental justice critiques. We review the US EPA's first community-based Cumulative Exposure Project, piloted in Brooklyn, NY, and highlight to what extent this process addressed the risk assessment critiques raised by environmental justice advocates. We suggest that a shift from risk to exposure assessment can provide an opportunity for local knowledge to both improve the technical assessment and its democratic nature and may ultimately allow environmental managers to better address environmental justice concerns in decision-making.
虽然风险评估仍然是大多数环境管理决策的驱动力,但其方法和假设受到了批评,其中包括延续环境不公正现象。对风险评估的公正性挑战声称,该过程忽视了低收入社区和有色人种社区面临的独特和多重危害,同时排除了有助于从评估论述中捕捉这些独特危害的当地非专业知识。本文强调了对传统风险评估的一些挑战,并指出传统的风险特征描述模型将继续忽视环境公正挑战,除非累积危害和当地知识被有意义地纳入评估过程。我们探讨从风险评估转向暴露评估是否能使环境管理者应对环境公正批评。我们回顾了美国环境保护局在纽约布鲁克林试点的首个基于社区的累积暴露项目,并强调该过程在多大程度上回应了环境公正倡导者提出的风险评估批评。我们认为,从风险评估转向暴露评估可以为当地知识提供一个机会,既能改进技术评估及其民主性质,最终可能使环境管理者在决策中更好地应对环境公正问题。