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Rating:  Summary: The book provides an outstanding analysis of EJ issues Review: "The Promise and Peril of Environmental Justice" provides a brilliant analysis of the public policy setting of Environmental Justice. What I got out of the book is that environmental regulations are inherently flawed because public participation in facility permitting comes near the end of permitting process. Because of this, impoverished communities with fewer political resources feel helpless to affect the siting of industrial facilities. Activists use this feeling of helplessness, along with bogeyman of increased risk, to rally opposition to a given facility. However, as described in the book, the increased risk posed by such a facility is almost always inconsequential. The author argues that the Environmental Justice movement is not about decreasing risk or improving community health, but rather community empowerment. Additionally, the author suggests that quality of life in impoverished communities can be improved through participation in the economic development that is spawned by environmental regulations. An example of this would be community participation in brownfields projects.The book is formatted in a style of a graduate-level textbook, with all of the sources of the book properly documented. This format, however, does not detract from the book's analysis of the public policy issues associated with Environmental Justice. I enjoyed Foreman's writing style and thought some passages were especially well-written. I wish all of my textbooks would have been this compelling. As an environmental compliance professional at a highly visible facility, I never quite understood why certain residents were so hostile toward our facility, why the efforts of local activists were at times disjointed, or why regulators would subject themselves to seemingly unnecessary public meetings. This book clarifies the motivations of these various groups in dealing with controversial facilities. I would recommend this book to both environmental regulators and compliance personnel in the private sector. I believe that meaningful strategies for community involvement in environmental permitting can be crafted based on the analysis presented in this book.
Rating:  Summary: The book provides an outstanding analysis of EJ issues Review: "The Promise and Peril of Environmental Justice" provides a brilliant analysis of the public policy setting of Environmental Justice. What I got out of the book is that environmental regulations are inherently flawed because public participation in facility permitting comes near the end of permitting process. Because of this, impoverished communities with fewer political resources feel helpless to affect the siting of industrial facilities. Activists use this feeling of helplessness, along with bogeyman of increased risk, to rally opposition to a given facility. However, as described in the book, the increased risk posed by such a facility is almost always inconsequential. The author argues that the Environmental Justice movement is not about decreasing risk or improving community health, but rather community empowerment. Additionally, the author suggests that quality of life in impoverished communities can be improved through participation in the economic development that is spawned by environmental regulations. An example of this would be community participation in brownfields projects. The book is formatted in a style of a graduate-level textbook, with all of the sources of the book properly documented. This format, however, does not detract from the book's analysis of the public policy issues associated with Environmental Justice. I enjoyed Foreman's writing style and thought some passages were especially well-written. I wish all of my textbooks would have been this compelling. As an environmental compliance professional at a highly visible facility, I never quite understood why certain residents were so hostile toward our facility, why the efforts of local activists were at times disjointed, or why regulators would subject themselves to seemingly unnecessary public meetings. This book clarifies the motivations of these various groups in dealing with controversial facilities. I would recommend this book to both environmental regulators and compliance personnel in the private sector. I believe that meaningful strategies for community involvement in environmental permitting can be crafted based on the analysis presented in this book.
Rating:  Summary: Praise for The Promise & Peril of Environmental Justice Review: "This book is a brilliant and comprehensive analysis of a very difficult and sensitive subject. Christopher Foreman demonstrates a mastery of the political, scientific, and policy issues at stake. He manages to show why, despite its serious flaws, the environmental justice movement is worthy of serious and sympathetic attention. Lucidly written and crisply presented, this book represents the first fully dispassionate account of environmental justice and the first to carefully explore its political and intellectual intricacies." Marc Landy, Boston College "Environmental justice continues to climb to the top of the U.S. environmental policy agenda. But there has been remarkably little serious consideration of the political and policy ramifications of adding distributional equity to the already-bulky set of requirements imposed by environmental legislation. This gap makes Christopher Foreman's thoughtful and provocative book all the more important, certain! to play a central role in the evolving debate over this issue." Barry G. Rabe, University of Michigan "With a rare combination of clarity, passion, and honesty, Christopher Foreman has tackled one of the more sensitive and difficult public policy issues in America today. He exploits characteristically sharp-edged analyses of both federal policies and activist rhetoric to demonstrate why stalemate and inaction seem likely to continue unless the political debate and agenda-setting processes can be reconfigured. Foreman's dissection of the internal politics is unrelenting, but he wields his analytical tools out of profound concern for the welfare of the people and communities caught up in these controversies. No one who cares about either environmental quality or the cause of social justice in a technological world can afford to miss this book." Jeffrey K. Stine, Smithsonian Institution and Marcel C. LaFollette, George Washington University Coeditors of Technolo! gy & Choice
Rating:  Summary: Long on ideology, light on substance Review: Although Foreman outlines the ideological basis of the environmnetal justice movement quite thoroughly, he fails to provide an adequate examination of how the movement is supposed to function in the real world. He examines the problems that the EJ movement faces in translating its ideological beliefs into real world actions, but Foreman does not present a substantive explanation for how it could be more effective in affecting the changes it desires. Overall, a fairly boring read.
Rating:  Summary: Ideology heavy, technically light Review: Having a background in solid and hazardous waste, environmental and occupational health, and a very good grasp of the environmental justice area, I was disappointed with the technical content of this work and with its obvious agenda of strong criticism for the EJ movement. Technically, I had many concerns about this work, I will provide two examples here: 1. Chapter 2, pg. 9, Mr. Foreman notes that hazardous waste facilities handle only a fraction of the hazardous waste generated in the U.S. The remainder being processed on site. These are treatment and concentration technologies that allow the waste to be transfered to TSDF facilities in highly concentrated form. This statement is self-evident to anyone with a background in environmental science and engineering..further the source of this quote is cited as a Waste Management Inc. executive, one of the first corporations to be named in the early EJ litigation..hardly an unbiased technical source. 2. Numerous statements in the chapter on Health are made concerning the impact of environmental exposures on health which should be supported by sound technical references on the topic. This field with the exception of lead is largely unexplored..which Foreman notes. However, some of the skepticism exhibited in this analysis in regard to the health impacts of environmental exposures is supported by such sources as The Washington Times and The Atlantic Monthly, while wonderful publications in there own right, they are not scientific, technical journals dealing solely with the issue of environmental health and human exposure. The lack of technical rigor exhibited in, what is in my opinion, a highly critical review of a grassroots movement left me dissappointed. I had hoped for a work that encouraged and inspired EJ advocates to a more vital movement.
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