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Ecological Information Needs for Environmental Justice
Authors:Joanna Burger  Stuart Harris  Barbara Harper  Michael Gochfeld
Institution:1. Division of Life Sciences, Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute (EOHSI), Consortium for Risk Evaluation with Stakeholder Participation (CRESP), 604 Allison Road, Piscataway, NJ 08854‐8082, USA.;2. Consortium for Risk Evaluation with Stakeholder Participation and Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA.;3. Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, Department of Science and Engineering, PO Box 638, Pendleton, OR, 97801, USA.;4. College of Public Health, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331‐4501, USA.;5. Environmental and Occupational Medicine, UMDNJ‐Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, NJ 08854, USA.
Abstract:The concept that all peoples should have their voices heard on matters that affect their well‐being is at the core of environmental justice (EJ). The inability of some people of small towns, rural areas, minority, and low‐income communities, to become involved in environmental decisions is sometimes due to a lack of information. We provide a template for the ecological information that is essential to examine environmental risks to EJ populations within average communities, using case studies from South Carolina (Savannah River, a DOE site with minority impacts), Washington (Hanford, a DOE site with Native American impacts), and New Jersey (nonpoint, urbanized community pollution). While the basic ecological and public health information needs for risk evaluations and assessments are well described, less attention has been focused on standardizing information about EJ communities or EJ populations within larger communities. We suggest that information needed about EJ communities and populations includes demographics, consumptive and nonconsumptive uses of their regional environment (for example, maintenance and cosmetic, medicinal/religious/cultural uses), eco‐dependency webs, and eco‐cultural attributes. A purely demographics approach might not even identify EJ populations or neighborhoods, much less their spatial relation to the impact source or to each other. Using information from three case studies, we illustrate that some information is readily available (e.g., consumption rates for standard items such as fish), but there is less information about medicinal, cultural, religious, eco‐cultural dependency webs, and eco‐cultural attributes, all of which depend in some way on intact, functioning, and healthy ecosystems.
Keywords:American Indians  eco‐cultural  environmental equity  environmental justice  stakeholders
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