Symposium: Environmental justice - The new wave Auteur various authors Périodique/Collection Virginia Environmental Law Journal | Vol. 14(4); 567 - 784; 218 p. Date 1995 Source IUCN (ID: ANA-057326) Éditeur | Lieu de publication University of Virginia School of Law | Charlottesville, VA, USA Langue Anglais Pays/Territoire États-Unis d'Amérique Sujet Environnement gén. Mot clé Équité Éthique et environnement Droits de l'homme Résumé Contents: 1. Developing the vision of environmental justice: A paradigm for achieving healthy and sustainable communities 2. The concept of environmental justice and a reconception of democracy 3. Pollution prevention and participatory research as a methodology for environmental justice 4. The demographics of dumping revisited: Examining the impact of alternative methodologies in environmental justice research 5.The market's response to environmental inequity: We have the solution; What's the problem? 6. Environmental justice: Racial gerrymandering for environmental siting decisions 7. Macho law brains, public citizens, and grassroots activists: Three models of environmental advocacy 8. New public policy tools in the grassroots movement: The Washington office on environmental justice 9. Environmental justice law and the challenges facing urban communities 10. Environmentalism in the Dudley street neighbourhood 11. Environmental justice and title VIII of the Civil Rights Act of 1968 (The Fair Housing Act) 12. Disparate impacts: The problems of discriminatory intent and the need for community activism 13. Reinvention in the name of environmental justice: A view from state government