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Contents
Biography
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About this book
Environmental Justice is one of the most important human rights challenges today, referring to inequitable environmental burdens born by groups such as racial minorities, residents of economically disadvantaged areas, or residents of developing nations. In this book, case studies from various parts of the world explore themes that include: historical and theoretical perspectives on Environmental Justice; the persistence of models of domination, exploitation and discrimination; gender implications of environmental degradation; violence and militarization; corporate globalization, climate change and the tragedy of Katrina. The Environmental Justice Movement represents a combination of academic, political, legal and grass-roots activism against environmental and social injustices.
Contents
Acknowledgments Notes on the Contributors List of Illustrations Introduction; F.C.Steady PART I Environmental Justice; G.S.Johnson Environmental Justice Cross-Culturally; F.C.Steady Mothering at the Crossroads; C.Krauss PART II Strategies of Confinement, C.A.Smith Gendered Dimensions of Environmental Justice; L.L.Dunn Neo-colonialism, Internal Colonialism and Chronic Environmental Injustice; F.O.Adeola Writing on Water; D.Tabachnick Hazardous Waste, Nuclear Energy, Health and Environmental Justice in South Africa; M.F.Phalane Environmental Injustice; P.Obeng The Environment Belongs to All of Us; J.L.Wong PART III Race, Class and Katrina; H.Lewis Landowners and Katrina; C.Hudson-Weems
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Biography
FILOMINA STEADY is Professor and Chair of Africana Studies (Gender Studies and Environmental Justice) at Wellesley College, USA. She is a recipient of the Otelia Cromwell Distinguished Alumna award from Smith College and obtained her doctorate (D.Phil.) from Oxford University where she received the Ioma Evans-Pritchard Research Award. She has taught at several universities in the United States and in Africa. Her publications include the award-winning anthology, The Black Woman Cross-Culturally and two recent books, Women and Amistad Connection, and Women and Collective Action in Africa. She has served as a Director and Special Advisor to the United Nations in Vienna, Geneva, New York and Addis Ababa, and is a founding member of the Association of African Women for Research and Development (AAWORD).