Charles Lee uses the concept of "second-generation of EJ practice" to signal a shift in the kinds of tools and methods required to characterize cumulative impacts of intersecting environmental burdens as a core organizing principle to the analysis of systemic injustices (especially racism) in the distribution of disproprtionate harm.
If the first generation of EJ practice involved identiying and quantifying factors that contribute to disproportionate impacts, the second generation of EJ practice involves nuanced & fine-grained mapping afforded by tools like CalEnviroScreen and EPA EJScreen. Both tools are organized around the concept of characterizing and mapping cumulative, disproportionate impacts.
For examples of how second-generation EJ practice is driving regulatory change:
Lee, Charles. 2021. “Confronting Disproportionate Burdens and Systemic Racism in Environmental Justice Policy.” Environmental Law Reporter, 19.
Anonymous, "Second generation of EJ practices", contributed by , Disaster STS Network, Platform for Experimental Collaborative Ethnography, last modified 9 March 2022, accessed 30 November 2024. http://465538.bc062.asia/content/second-generation-ej-practices
Critical Commentary
Concept note