Brinkley Catherine, Wagner Jenny
University of California, Davis, Human Ecology, Community and Regional Development, 1 Shields Ave, Davis, United States.
University of California, Davis, Public Health, 1 Shields Ave, Davis, United States.
J Am Plann Assoc. 2022 Nov 21;90:63-76. doi: 10.1080/01944363.2022.2118155.
Environmental justice (EJ) seeks to correct legacies of disproportionately burdening low-income and Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) communities with environmental hazards that contribute to health inequalities. Federal and state policies increasingly require plans to assess and incorporate EJ principles. The current lack of accessible data and plan evaluation on EJ has been a barrier to policy setting and benchmarking. We created a framework for analyzing content across a large corpus of plans by using quantitative text analysis on 461 California city general plans, also known as comprehensive plans. To verify results and identify specific policies, we conducted content analysis on a subset of seven plans. Demonstrating the broad applicability of EJ principles in planning, policies spanned all required elements of general plans: housing, circulation, land use, health, safety, open space, air quality, and noise. We found that the most headway in EJ planning has been made in cities with a majority population of color and well before the 2018 California state mandate to address EJ. Policies were primarily focused on preventing adverse exposures as opposed to correcting for legacies of inequality. Further, although all policies address vulnerable populations and places, very few specifically addressed race or racism. Thus, EJ has been largely operationalized as health equity.
We identified 628 EJ policies focused on vulnerable populations across the seven city plans included in content analysis. The smorgasbord of policy approaches provided fodder for cities across the United States to incorporate an EJ approach to planning. Gaps in focus areas reveal room for policy innovation (e.g., emphasis on language justice, formerly incarcerated individuals, and noise ordinance policing). We invite planners and community advocates to search across California's plans for EJ policy inspiration, and to use the appendix of EJ policies cataloged in this research as a benchmark of city-level innovation.
问题、研究策略与发现:环境正义(EJ)旨在纠正长期以来低收入以及黑人、原住民和有色人种(BIPOC)社区承担不成比例的环境危害负担的遗留问题,这些危害导致了健康不平等。联邦和州政策越来越要求制定计划来评估并纳入环境正义原则。目前缺乏关于环境正义的可获取数据和计划评估,这一直是政策制定和基准设定的障碍。我们通过对461份加利福尼亚城市总体规划(也称为综合规划)进行定量文本分析,创建了一个用于分析大量规划内容的框架。为了验证结果并确定具体政策,我们对七个规划的子集进行了内容分析。结果表明环境正义原则在规划中具有广泛适用性,政策涵盖了总体规划的所有必需要素:住房、交通、土地利用、健康、安全、开放空间、空气质量和噪音。我们发现,在有色人种占多数的城市中,环境正义规划取得了最大进展,且远早于2018年加利福尼亚州要求解决环境正义问题的规定。政策主要侧重于预防不利暴露,而不是纠正不平等遗留问题。此外,尽管所有政策都涉及弱势群体和地区,但很少有政策专门针对种族或种族主义问题。因此,环境正义在很大程度上已作为健康公平得以实施。
我们在内容分析中确定了628项针对七个城市规划中弱势群体的环境正义政策。五花八门的政策方法为美国各城市采用环境正义规划方法提供了借鉴。重点领域的差距揭示了政策创新的空间(例如,强调语言正义、曾经入狱的个人以及噪音条例监管)。我们邀请规划者和社区倡导者在加利福尼亚州的规划中寻找环境正义政策灵感,并将本研究中编录的环境正义政策附录用作城市层面创新的基准。