Abstract

The environmental justice (EJ) movement has been a key factor in the United States’ struggle to provide a healthy environment for all to thrive. The origins of the movement date as far back as the 1960’s, led primarily by people of color and low economic status communities living in America’s most polluted environments. More recently, the just sustainability movement calls for the inclusion of EJ considerations, including social justice, equity, and human rights, into sustainability science and initiatives. Whereas previous work has elucidated synergies between both concepts, this paper provides a literature review of studies that apply the concepts of EJ and sustainability in the US to inform ways in which the concepts are merging (or not) for practical applications. The primary objectives of this review are (1) to identify the common themes in which EJ and sustainability are applied, (2) to qualitatively assess the progression of the integration of these important movements in practical applications, and (3) to inform research gaps that exist in this area. In general, we find that despite the increasing conceptual emphasis on the need to integrate these important concepts, the reviewed scholarship reveals that in practice, the integration of EJ and sustainability remains piecemeal.

Highlights

  • While previous work has already outlined the need for the integration of environmental justice (EJ) and just sustainability and offers comparisons and synergies between the two movements [8,9,10,35], the key contribution of this paper is to explore the integration of these movements in actual scholarly practice within the United States (US)

  • We summarize the themes generated from this literature review, we describe the integration of EJ and sustainability, and lastly, we identify research gaps

  • Despite much effort and focus on the concept of just sustainability and many scholars calling for better integration of EJ issues and sustainability, our literature review suggests that current constructions of environmental sustainability and sustainable development remain inadequate to meaningfully do so consistently

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Summary

Introduction

An abundance of environmental injustices plagues the United States (US), from lead poisoning, stemming from a shift in water supply for Flint, Michigan; cancer-causing toxins leaking from landfills in Dickson County, Tennessee; dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane (DDT) pollution discharged in wastewater effecting downstream communities in Triana, Alabama; and nuclear waste disposal conflicts in Sierra Blanca, Texas; to industrial air pollution from a steel plant in Dearborn, Michigan [1]. These are just a few examples highlighted by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which focuses on environmental injustice case studies impacting communities in the US. They share an underlying narrative of legacy industries who created pollution, causing exposure to pollution and/or major health issues (e.g., higher asthma and cancer rates) for communities of color and poor communities living nearby who were not the cause of the contamination.

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