Environmental Racism: A Peril for the Poor

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In the modern twenty-first century, there are many parts of society that are overlooked. Those that live in the higher rungs of the social order often live in the comfort of others. This phenomenon is known as environmental racism, which can be defined as any environmental policy, practice, or directive that disproportionately disadvantages nonwhite communities (Desmond and Emirbayer: 196). However, these policies can discriminate against poor whites as well since environmental racism categorically attacks communities that are less economically advantaged and live in poorer neighborhoods. Through environmental racism, the rich profit and the poor suffer, and this is done many times at the cost of people’s lives as seen in the case of Native …show more content…

People of varying communities are affected by environmental racism differently. For example, for the Native Americans living on the Skull Valley Reservation in Utah, the largest threat to the population is environmental racism. Frequently, tribal lands are seized or bought from leaders and used as nerve-gas incinerators, toxic-waste landfills, and radioactive dump sites, while residents are exposed to large amounts of harmful substances in the air and water. As a result, Native Americans are at high risk of contracting lung diseases and cancer. According to statistics, residents on these reservations are 2.8 times more likely to die of diabetes, and infant mortality rates are 1.2 times the national average (Desmond and Emirbayer: 196). However, environmental racism is not exclusive to only Native Americans. Rural black communities in the deep south and poor whites in Kentucky and Virginia have faced similar treatment as well. In fact, the Lower Mississippi River Industrial Corridor has been labeled ‘Cancer Alley’ due to the high carcinogen levels in the area. The government failed to protect these people, and in fact gave tax exemptions to the polluting companies, which heightened the number of factories. The increased number of pollution in the area has adversely affected …show more content…

While groups such as Native Americans and Chester City residents suffer the imminent health effects of environmental racism, waste plants and the average American benefit from it. As shown through my personal life, the absence of a waste dump or manufacturing company in my predominantly-white neighborhood reveals the discrepancies between various races, as well as the effects socioeconomic standing can have on the degree people are impacted by environmental racism. Through this analysis, it is the goal that people now view their neighborhoods in a new light, and utilize the social scientific imagination to see that there is always an underlying cause in present social

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