African & African American Studies: Environmental Justice
Environmental Justice
This page lists selected information sources on Environmental Justice.
Books provide information on a narrower subject area, and may only cover a specific aspect of a subject area. Some books may also provide broad surveys of a topic.
Reference sources provide summaries of facts, the definition of terms, summaries of histories, short biographies, etc., on large subject areas. They are the best place to start research, particularly for users unfamiliar with a field of study or subject area. Most of the reference sources at LSU Libraries are accessible online, but there are many reference sources available in print in the Libraries' stacks.
Journals include articles written on specific, narrow topics. Many articles are peer-reviewed by experts to ensure accuracy and quality of information. Search within journals to find scholarly articles.
The Videos listed are conferences.
Other Resources will include web sources that cover topic information.
Videos
Louisiana Organizations
- Power Coalition for Equality and Justice We are a coalition of community-based organizations who work together to educate and empower voters across Louisiana. Through our voter engagement and community organizing work, we seek to unify our collective voices into a stronger, more cohesive force that can successfully advocate for an agenda of shared values and issues. Our work is diverse and includes power mapping, listening sessions, organizing, voter engagement, policy advocacy, and leadership development. It is centered on creating spaces where community can come together to lift up the issues that impact them, and then connect those issues to local, regional, and national resources–including the state voter file–to move our shared agenda.
- Deep South Center for Environmental Justice, Inc The DSCEJ promotes the rights of all people to be free from environmental harm, particularly communities of color along the Mississippi River Chemical Corridor and the broader Gulf Coast Region. Formerly affiliated with Xavier University and Dillard University, the Center is now a fully independent, nonprofit entity dedicated to addressing the unique challenges of climate change facing communities of color and poor communities in the South. It maintains collaborative relationships with HBCUs in Louisiana and nationwide. Through numerous grants, the DSCEJ supports innovative projects in research, education, capacity-building, public advocacy, and training for communities, workers, and students to achieve environmental justice.
- Healthy Gulf Healthy Gulf’s purpose is to collaborate with and serve communities who love the Gulf of Mexico by providing the research, communications, and coalition-building tools needed to reverse the long pattern of over exploitation of the Gulf’s natural resources.
- Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality The Department's mission is to provide service to the people of Louisiana through comprehensive environmental protection in order to promote and protect health, safety and welfare.
- The Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana CRCL supports the progress our state has seen on solving coastal land loss in recent years, especially through the science-based State Coastal Master Plan. But an even bolder response is required. We urgently need large-scale land building, including sediment diversions that will replicate the natural process that built south Louisiana. The most important actions to be taken to advance projects are under the control of the state and federal governments. All the work we do must drive action to implement this work. To this end, we must build support for restoration among stakeholders, and we must build the funds and capacity of CRCL to increase our influence and sustain our efforts.
- Louisiana Environmental Action Network The Louisiana Environmental Action Network (LEAN) is a community based not-for-profit organization that has been working since 1986 to resolve the unique environmental struggles present in Louisiana. Through education, empowerment, advocacy, and support; LEAN provides the necessary tools and services to individuals and communities facing environmental problems. Such problems that often threaten their health, safety and quality of life.
Government Documents
Government Documents are very important for your work in this class as you are looking at environmental regulations, the role of the regulatory agencies creating the regulations, as well as the enforcement and compliance with those regulations produced.
For assistance in navigating the rulemaking process and resources on both the federal and state level, please reach out to Hayley Johnson @ hjohnson1@lsu.edu.
Regulations
What is a regulation?
Regulations are mandatory requirements that can apply to individuals, businesses, state or local governments, non-profit institutions, or others. Regulations set specific requirements about what is legal and what isn't.
Why are regulations important?
Regulations are important because a law doesn't include all the necessary details to explain how entities might follow the law. Regulatory agencies step in to make the laws work on a day-to-day level.
What is a regulatory agency?
A regulatory agency, like the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), is a government entity that is authorized, in this case by Congress, to write regulations that explain the technical, operational, and legal details necessary to implement laws.
How Does EPA Create Regulations?
Step 1: EPA Proposes A Regulation
- The EPA researches the issue(s) and if necessary, proposes a regulation which is also known as a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM).
- The proposal is listed in the Federal Register so that members of the public can review, consider, and send comments to the EPA.
- The proposed rule and supporting documents are also filed on the EPA's official docket on Regulations.gov.
Step 2: EPA Considers Comments and Issues a Final Rule
- EPA considers the comments received on the proposed regulation and will revise the regulation accordingly and issue a final rule.
- The final rule is also published in the Federal Register (FR) and in EPA's official docket on Regulations.gov.
Step 3: The regulation is codified in the Code of Federal Regulations
Once the completed regulation has been printed in the Federal Register (FR) as a final rule, it is then codified when it is added to the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR). The CFR is the official record of all regulations created by the federal government. It has 50 volumes, called titles, each of which focuses on a particular area. Almost all environmental regulations appear in Title 40. The CFR is revised yearly with Title 40 revised every July 1st.
More Resources on Regulations from the EPA
Books
Fannie Lou Hamer's Revolutionary Practical Theology by
ISBN: 9789004431454Publication Date: 2020-10-08
Reference
Kirk-Othmer Chemical Technology and the Environment, 2 Volume Set by
Call Number: TP9 .K537 2007 V.1ISBN: 9780470105405Publication Date: 2007-05-21
Journals
- Air, Soil and Water Research Air, Soil and Water Research publishes research on soil, air, and water. The journal reports on properties—including physical, chemical, biochemical, and biological—analysis, microbiology, chemicals and pollution, consequences for plants and crops, soil hydrology, and other considerations.
- AIMS Environmental Science AIMS Environmental Science is an international Open Access journal devoted to publishing peer-reviewed, high quality, original papers in the field of Environmental science. We publish the following article types: original research articles, reviews, editorials, letters, and conference reports.All published papers' full text from 2016 will be indexed by WoS.
- Environment, Development and Sustainability Environment, Development and Sustainability is an international, multidisciplinary journal covering all aspects of the environmental impacts of socio-economic development. Concerned with the complex interactions between development and environment, its purpose is to seek ways and means for achieving sustainability in all human activities aimed at such development. Coverage includes interactions among society, development and environment, and their implications for sustainable development; technical, economic, ethical and philosophical aspects of sustainable development; local, regional and global sustainability and their practical implementation; development and application of indicators of sustainability; development, verification, implementation and monitoring of policies for sustainable development; sustainable use of land, water, energy and biological resources in development; impacts of agriculture and forestry activities on soil and aquatic ecosystems and biodiversity, and much more
- Nature Climate Change Nature Climate Change is a monthly journal dedicated to publishing the most significant and cutting-edge research on the nature, underlying causes or impacts of global climate change and its implications for the economy, policy and the world at large. All editorial decisions are made by a team of full-time professional editors.
- Nature Sustainability Nature Sustainability is an online-only monthly journal publishing the best research about sustainability from the natural and social sciences, as well as from the fields of engineering and policy. All editorial decisions are made by a team of full-time professional editors.
- Global Environmental Change: Human and Policy Dimensions Global Environmental Change is a peer-reviewed international journal publishing high quality, theoretically and empirically rigorous articles, which advance knowledge about the human and policy dimensions of global environmental change. The journal interprets global environmental change to mean the outcome of processes that are manifest in localities, but with consequences at multiple spatial, temporal and socio-political scales. The journal is interested in articles which have a significant social science component. These include articles that address the social drivers or consequences of environmental change, or social and policy processes that seek to address problems of environmental change. Topics include, but are not restricted to, the drivers, consequences and management of changes in: biodiversity and ecosystem services, climate, coasts, food systems, land use and land cover, oceans, urban areas, and water resources.
- Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, produced by the Ecological Society of America (ESA), publishes boundary-spanning papers that illustrate the importance of ecology and environmental science to scientific inquiry, biodiversity and ecosystem conservation, natural resource management, public policy, and other areas of ecological and environmental problem solving
- Water Research In association with the International Water Association Water Research has an open access companion journal Water Research X, sharing the same aims and scope, editorial team, submission system and rigorous peer review. Water Research publishes refereed, original research papers on all aspects of the science and technology of the anthropogenic water cycle, water quality, and its management worldwide. A broad outline of the journal's scope includes: Treatment processes for water and wastewaters (municipal, agricultural, industrial, and on-site treatment), including resource recovery and residuals management; Urban hydrology including sewer systems, stormwater management, and green infrastructure; Drinking water treatment and distribution; Potable and non-potable water reuse; Sanitation, public health, and risk assessment; Anaerobic digestion, solid and hazardous waste management, including source characterization and the effects and control of leachates and gaseous emissions; Contaminants (chemical, microbial, anthropogenic particles such as nanoparticles or microplastics) and related water quality sensing, monitoring, fate, and assessment; Anthropogenic impacts on inland, tidal, coastal and urban waters, focusing on surface and ground waters, and point and non-point sources of pollution; Environmental restoration, linked to surface water, groundwater and groundwater remediation; Analysis of the interfaces between sediments and water, and between water and atmosphere, focusing specifically on anthropogenic impacts; Mathematical modelling, systems analysis, machine learning, and beneficial use of big data related to the anthropogenic water cycle; Socio-economic, policy, and regulations studies.
- Remote Sensing of Environment Remote Sensing of Environment (RSE) serves the Earth observation community with the publication of results on the theory, science, applications, and technology of studies contributing to advance the science of remote sensing. Thoroughly interdisciplinary, RSE publishes on terrestrial, oceanic and atmospheric sensing. The emphasis of the journal is on biophysical and quantitative approaches to remote sensing at local to global scales and covers a wide range of applications and techniques: Applications Land cover mapping, vegetation species identification and mapping Land surface energy and water balance Disturbance (fire, insect, harvest) Agriculture (crop mapping, yield prediction, phenology, soil properties, management practices) Forest and rangeland productivity and inventories Ecological applications & Ecosystem services (wetland, biodiversity, habitat, animal population, etc.) Urban applications (mapping, energy consumption, population, etc.) Terrestrial ecosystem productivity and carbon cycles Soil properties (moisture, organic matter, texture, structure, etc.) Geological Applications (minerals, landslide, subsidence, geomorphology, earth quake, etc.) Hydrology and water resources Inland and coastal waters Oceanography and marine science Cryosphere, mapping and modelling Atmospheric science and meteorology Snow, ice and glaciers
- Journal of Hazardous Materials The Journal of Hazardous Materials is an international forum that advances world class research by publishing articles in the areas of Environmental Science and Engineering. We publish full-length research papers, review articles, and perspectives that improve our understanding of the hazards and risks that certain materials pose to public health and the environment. Authors are supposed to address two questions in their manuscripts: 1) is the studied subject an environmental contaminant? and 2) is the study conducted under an environmentally relevant condition? "Environmental contaminants" exclude the compounds that do not exert hazardous effects on the environment or humans via contamination. Of note, difference between wastes and hazardous materials needs to be spotlighted to further clarify the JHM scope. The journal is highly interested in specific compounds or microbial agents with environmentally hazardous effects. "Environmentally relevant conditions" typically require an experiment or modeling study to be conducted with the consideration of environmental factors, such as temperature, pH, environmental matrix constituents, and chemical doses for waste removal, within their respective realistic occurrence ranges. Particularly, we have noticed that studies on nanomaterials or emerging contaminants (e.g., sensing/detection, effects, and removal) in many manuscripts were performed with unrealistically high concentrations, which can be several orders of magnitude higher than their real occurrence ranges in an environmental medium. Environmental implications from such studies would be very limited. Although higher concentrations may exhibit a full spectrum of hazardous effects, a manuscript ought to embrace realistic level(s) of a hazardous material in the range of the studied concentrations.
- Global Change Biology Global Change Biology exists to promote understanding of the interface between all aspects of current environmental change that affects a substantial part of the globe and biological systems. It publishes articles on the impacts of global change on biological systems and solutions. Studies must concern biological systems, regardless of whether they are aquatic or terrestrial, and managed or natural environments. Both biological responses and feedbacks to change are included, and may be considered at any level of organization from molecular to biome. Studies may employ theoretical, modeling, analytical, experimental, observational, and historical approaches and should be exploratory rather than confirmatory. GCB publishes Primary Research Articles, Technical Advances, Reviews, GCB Reviews, Mini Reviews, Opinions, Research Reports, Perspectives, Editorials, Science Behind the News, Commentaries, Letters to the Editor, and Responses. Global Change Biology defines global change as any consistent trend in the environment - past, present or projected - that affects a substantial part of the globe. Examples include: rising tropospheric ozone, carbon dioxide and sulphur dioxide concentrations increasing UV-B irradiation global climate change biological sinks and sources of atmospheric trace gases eutrophication land use change loss of biodiversity biological feedback on climate change biological mitigation for atmospheric change
Data Bases
- Agricola This link opens in a new windowContaining bibliographic records from the U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Agricultural Library, this source provides access to millions of citations. The citations are comprised of journal articles, book chapters, theses and much more, all relating to the field of agriculture.
- CABI Digital Library This link opens in a new windowIncluding the CAB Abstracts and CAB Health, this is the leading database for literature related to agriculture and applied life sciences, including strong international coverage.
- Environment Complete This link opens in a new windowThe Environment Complete database offers deep coverage in applicable areas of agriculture, ecosystem ecology, energy, natural resources, marine & freshwater science, geography, pollution & waste management, environmental technology, environmental law, public policy, social impacts, urban planning, and more.
- GreenFILE This link opens in a new windowGreenFILE provides a collection of scholarly, government and general-interest titles and covers content about the environmental effects of individuals, corporations and local/national governments as well as what can be done at each level to minimize these effects.This tool offers indexing and abstracts for more than 780,000 records and open access full text for more than 11,000 records. Key journals include Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, Conservation Biology, Forest Ecology & Management, International Journal of Green Energy, and Journal of Wildlife Management.
- SAGE Journals Online This link opens in a new windowSAGE Publications publishes over 460 journals in Business, Humanities, Social Sciences, and Science, Technology and Medicine. SAGE Journals Online is the delivery platform that provides online access to the full text of individual SAGE journals. The SAGE Full-Text Collections, SAGE's award-winning, discipline-specific research databases, are also available on SAGE Journals Online.
- Scopus This link opens in a new windowScopus combines a comprehensive abstract and citation database with enriched data and linked scholarly literature across a wide variety of disciplines. It finds authoritative research, identifies experts and provides access to reliable data, metrics and analytical tools.
- Statista This link opens in a new windowStatista offers over 1.5 million statistics and facts on more than 60,000 topics drawn from over 18,000 different sources, including market researchers, trade organizations, scientific journals, and government databases. The data is aggregated by a dedicated team of researchers and statisticians who are experts in the 20 market and industry sectors covered. For each data set, extensive source information is provided as well as several download formats for direct integration into various end products.
- MEDLINE This link opens in a new windowSponsored by the National Library of Medicine, Medline contains citations and abstracts to international biomedical literature from over 3700 journals on topics including research, clinical practice, administration, policy issues, and healthcare services. The database contains a broad range of medical topics relating to research, clinical practice, administration, policy issues, and health care services. OldMedline from the NLM Gateway includes the years 1958 - 1965. The ISI/Web of Knowledge Interface contains info from 1950 to the present.
Get Involved
Comment on EPA Regulations
- Regulations.gov- This multi-agency website is EPA's official on-line comment system and serves as a clearinghouse for materials related to EPA rulemakings. You may submit comments on proposed regulations via this website.
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If you know only the title or subject of the regulation, the easiest way to search is to enter the full title or keywords in the "Keyword or ID" field on the Regulations.gov home page. Be as specific as possible to help narrow your search results.
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If you know the Docket or Document ID number, enter it in the "Keyword or ID" field. One of these tracking numbers are likely to yield more targeted results than a title search.
- Once you locate the regulation you want to comment on, you can open the document to find other ways to comment (i.e., via mail or e-mail) in addition to the Regulations.gov on-line comment form. Look for a section of the regulation called "ADDRESSES," which will specify other ways to comment.
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- GovInfo- Use govinfo as an alternate to Regulations.gov. This website is maintained by the U.S. Government Publishing Office and provides access to every regulation published in the Federal Register since 1936, as well as many other federal government publications. Navigate to the proposed regulation you are interested in; to do so, it is best if you know the date the proposed regulation was published or the citation. Once you reach the regulation, you will find instructions on how to submit comments in a section called "ADDRESSES."
Keep Tabs on Rulemakings
Regulations.gov- This is EPA's official on-line commenting system. Any rule that is open for comment with a docket number in the Federal Register notice directs you to Regulations.gov so you may submit a comment. Also,from Regulations.gov, you can sign up for email alerts.
Read Regulatory Agendas and Plans
EPA contributes an annual Regulatory Plan and Semiannual Regulatory Agenda to the U.S. government's Unified Agenda, which is published in the Federal Register. EPA Regulatory Plans and Agendas broadly describe the regulatory activities that EPA will be undertaking over the next year; the Plan describes EPA's core priorities for the next fiscal year.
Access EPA Docket Centers
The EPA Docket Center collects and publicizes information related to EPA regulations, such as Federal Register notices, public comments, and background documentation about rulemakings. In accordance with Federal law, the Docket Center makes regulatory materials available electronically on Regulations.gov and in hardcopy form at the Docket Center Reading room. Please see Access EPA Dockets for more information about accessing and commenting on rulemakings.
Regulations on the State Level
The process through which the EPA creates regulations is mirrored on the state level.
In Louisiana, the Department of Environmental Quality develops, proposes, and promulgates regulations that pertain to the environment and public health.
Step 1
DEQ submits documents to the Office of the State Register for publication in the Louisiana Register. The Louisiana Register is the official state publication for notifying the public of a state agency's intent to propose new or amended regulations. The Louisiana Register is published on the twentieth of each month.
Step 2
Publication of the following documents initiates the rulemaking clock:
Notice of Intent-announcement to the public that a change to the DEQ regulations is being considered.
Fiscal and Economic Impact Statement-estimate of the cost to the state and to those affected if the regulation is implemented.
Proposed Rule-document which adds new regulations or revises or removes existing text.
Step 3
DEQ conducts a public hearing on the proposed rule 35-50 days after publication of the Notice of Intent. The comment period opens when the Notice of Intent is published and normally closes seven days after the public hearing is held, approximately 42-47days.
Step 4
After the close of the comment period, DEQ prepares the following documents (collectively called the "Summary Report"):
Summary of the comments received and DEQ's response to the comments;
Concise statement of the pros and cons of comment suggestion;
list of technical amendments; and
proposed rule with technical amendments incorporated.
Step 5
DEQ submits the Summary Report to the Legislative Oversight Committee composed of the House Committee on the Environment and the Senate Committee on Environmental Quality.
Step 6
The Legislative Oversight Committees have 30 days to consider the proposed rule. The committees may or may not hold a hearing.
Step 7
If the regulation is not disapproved by the Legislative Oversight Committees, DEQ submits it to the Office of the State Register for publication in the upcoming issue of the Louisiana Register.
Step 8
The rule becomes codified into the Louisiana Administrative Code.
Step 9
The rule is also codified by DEQ into its Environmental Regulatory Code, which is updated quarterly.
Visit the DEQ Rules and Regulations page for links to relevant documents and resources