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Environmental Justice, Environment
Christopher H. Foreman, Jr., Nonresident Senior Fellow, Governance Studies
Human and Ecological Risk Assessment
January 2000 —
Allegations that disproportionate environmental risks fall on low-income and minority communities promote calls for "environmental justice." A related claim suggests that higher rates of some diseases stem from unequal risks. The empirical evidence supporting these claims remains weak, but uncertainty and controversy are unlikely to abate in the near future. The environmental justice movement has successfully mobilized its constituents, and captured the attention of policymakers, with a politically potent rhetoric of "risk and racism." Ironically, the movement remains largely uninterested in, or even hostile to, formal risk assessment even while ostensibly calling for more of it.
Christopher H. Foreman, Jr., United States Commission on Civil Rights, January 11, 2002
Christopher H. Foreman, Jr., Risk Policy Report, March 20, 1998
Christopher H. Foreman, Jr., The New York Times, December 21, 1997
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Christopher H. Foreman, Jr., Brookings Institution Press 1998 c. 160pp.
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