Cannon Clare E B
Department of Human Ecology, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA.
Toxics. 2024 Apr 17;12(4):295. doi: 10.3390/toxics12040295.
Environmental justice research has focused on the distribution of environmental inequalities, such as proximity to landfills, across the U.S. and globally.
Public health research and environmental health research, specifically, have focused on toxic exposure-encompassing individuals or communities that are disproportionately exposed to contaminants that are harmful or potentially harmful to them. Yet, little research has applied critical environmental justice theory-characterized by the idea that marginalized communities need to be treated as indispensable rather than disposable-to the study of toxic exposure. To fill this gap, the current paper offers a case study approach applying critical environmental justice theory to the study of disproportionate and unequal exposure to toxic contaminants.
This case study is of Kettleman City, a rural, unincorporated community in the heart of California's Central Valley (USA). This community experiences the co-location of environmental hazards, including residing at the intersection of two major highways and hosting a class I hazardous-waste landfill, which is one of the few licensed to accept PCBs. PCBs are a contaminant that has been linked with several adverse health outcomes, including cancers and low birthweight. Residents may also experience poor air quality from proximity to the highways.
This case highlights the uneven distribution of pollution and environmental degradation that may be shouldered by the community, along with their experiences of adverse health and social impacts. This analysis reveals the importance of incorporating a critical environmental justice perspective to unpack experiences of not only disproportionate exposure but also disproportionate procedural and recognitional inequality.
This research highlights the untapped potential of environmental justice to catalyze exposure science in challenging the unequal distribution of contaminants.
环境正义研究聚焦于美国乃至全球范围内环境不平等现象的分布情况,比如与垃圾填埋场的距离。
公共卫生研究,尤其是环境卫生研究,聚焦于有毒物质暴露问题,涉及那些不成比例地暴露于对自身有害或潜在有害污染物的个人或社区。然而,很少有研究将以边缘化社区应被视为不可或缺而非可随意处置这一理念为特征的批判性环境正义理论应用于有毒物质暴露研究。为填补这一空白,本文提供了一种案例研究方法,将批判性环境正义理论应用于对有毒污染物不成比例和不平等暴露的研究。
本案例研究的对象是凯特尔曼城,它是美国加利福尼亚州中央谷地中心的一个未建制的乡村社区。该社区存在多种环境危害因素,包括位于两条主要高速公路的交汇处,且有一个一级危险废物填埋场,这是少数几个获准接收多氯联苯的填埋场之一。多氯联苯是一种与多种不良健康后果相关的污染物,包括癌症和低出生体重。居民还可能因靠近高速公路而面临空气质量差的问题。
本案例凸显了该社区可能承担的污染和环境退化的不均衡分布,以及他们所经历的不良健康和社会影响。这一分析揭示了纳入批判性环境正义视角的重要性,不仅要剖析不成比例暴露的经历,还要剖析不成比例的程序和认可方面的不平等经历。
本研究凸显了环境正义在推动暴露科学挑战污染物不平等分布方面尚未被挖掘的潜力。