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Whole Terrain

a journal of reflective environmental practice

  • Home
  • Current Volume
    • Current Volume: Breaking Bread
    • Previous Volumes
      • Volume 23: Breaking Bread
      • Volume 22: Trust
      • Volume 21: Metamorphosis
      • Volume 20: Heresy
      • Volume 19: Net Works
      • Volume 18: Boundaries
      • Volume 17: Significance of Scale
      • Volume 16: ((r)e)volution
      • Volume 15: Where is Nature?
      • Volume 14: Celebration & Ceremony
      • Volume 13: Risk
      • Volume 12: Resilience
      • Volume 11: Gratitude & Greed
      • Volume 10: Surplus & Scarcity
      • Volume 9: Serious Play
      • Volume 8: Legacy & Posterity
      • Volume 7: Transience, Permanence, and Commitment
      • Volume 6: Creative Collaborations
      • Volume 5: Research as Real Work
      • Volume 4: Exploring Environmental Stereotypes
      • Volume 3: Environmental Ethics at Work
      • Volume 2: Spirituality, Identity and Professional Ethics
      • Volume 1: Environmental Identity and Professional Choices
  • Call for Submissions
    • Current Call
    • New Terrain Award for Undergraduates
    • Web Content Call
    • Previous Calls
  • About
    • The Team
  • Contact
  • Breaking Bread / Featured

    Announcing the Publication of Breaking Bread

    January 8, 2018

Tag: Toxic Wasts and Race in the United States

Book Review: Rethinking Environmental Justice in Sustainable Cities
Book Review Environmental Justice 

Book Review: Rethinking Environmental Justice in Sustainable Cities

On October 25, 2017 by Cherice Bock

Originally posted on May 30, 2016 by Cherice Bock Editor, Whole Terrain We’ve known for 30 years that race is a stronger predictor than economic status of proximity to toxic waste and other industrial pollutants. The work of Robert Bullard (“Solid Waste Sites and the Black Houston…

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