Climate change and environmental injustice in a bi-national context

Few studies have taken a conventional quantitative environmental justice approach to assessing the inequitable implications of climate change at a fine scale, such as across neighborhoods within an urban area. In this paper, we test the “environmental justice hypothesis” for climate change-related v...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied geography (Sevenoaks) 2012-04, Vol.33, p.25-35
Hauptverfasser: Grineski, Sara E., Collins, Timothy W., Ford, Paula, Fitzgerald, Rosa, Aldouri, Raed, Velázquez-Angulo, Gilberto, de Lourdes Romo Aguilar, Maria, Lu, Duanjun
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container_end_page 35
container_issue
container_start_page 25
container_title Applied geography (Sevenoaks)
container_volume 33
creator Grineski, Sara E.
Collins, Timothy W.
Ford, Paula
Fitzgerald, Rosa
Aldouri, Raed
Velázquez-Angulo, Gilberto
de Lourdes Romo Aguilar, Maria
Lu, Duanjun
description Few studies have taken a conventional quantitative environmental justice approach to assessing the inequitable implications of climate change at a fine scale, such as across neighborhoods within an urban area. In this paper, we test the “environmental justice hypothesis” for climate change-related variables in the bi-national context of El Paso, Texas and Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua using a matched set of social indicators from the 2000 US and Mexican censuses and biophysical data related to heat, ozone and flooding. T-test results demonstrated that social marginality and climate change-related hazard exposure were generally higher in Juárez as compared to El Paso. Using spatial regression models, we found patterns of environmental injustice in the sister cities related to these climate change-related hazards. Lower social class neighborhoods generally faced increased risks from extreme heat in both cities, and from floods and peak ozone in El Paso. In El Paso, children also faced significant and disproportionate exposure to peak ozone, while female-headed households were significantly more burdened by flooding and peak ozone in Juárez. Despite the limitations of this cross-sectional study, we can expect injustices to heighten as neighborhoods at-risk now become increasingly exposed under climate change scenarios. In sum, this analysis provides a model for investigating inequities associated with future small area impacts of climate change. ► Social marginality and hazard exposure were higher in Juárez than in El Paso. ► Lower class neighborhoods faced increased risks from extreme heat in both cities. ► In El Paso, children faced significant and disproportionate exposure to peak ozone. ► Female-headed households were significantly burdened by flooding and peak ozone in Juárez.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.apgeog.2011.05.013
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subjects Climate
Climate change
Climate gap
Climate justice
Cross sections
Environmental injustice
Flood
Flooding
Geography
Hazards
Heat
Mathematical models
Ozone
US-Mexico border
title Climate change and environmental injustice in a bi-national context
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