The role of policy in the creation and perpetuation of environmental injustice: two case studies in an Australian regional city

Environmental injustice is a matter of concern in the western world. However, there has been minimal exploration of environmental injustice outside of the U.S, with all existing non- U.S. based literature sparse and narrowly defined, relating to either the export of environmental risk, economic domi...

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Main Author: Dumont, Elizabeth Lillian
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/33656/1/33656-dumont-2013-thesis.pdf
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spelling ftjamescook:oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:33656 2023-10-01T03:56:01+02:00 The role of policy in the creation and perpetuation of environmental injustice: two case studies in an Australian regional city Dumont, Elizabeth Lillian 2013 application/pdf https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/33656/1/33656-dumont-2013-thesis.pdf unknown https://doi.org/10.25903/swtr-bb51 https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/33656/ https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/33656/1/33656-dumont-2013-thesis.pdf Dumont, Elizabeth Lillian (2013) The role of policy in the creation and perpetuation of environmental injustice: two case studies in an Australian regional city. Masters (Research) thesis, James Cook University. open Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2013 ftjamescook https://doi.org/10.25903/swtr-bb51 2023-09-04T22:36:13Z Environmental injustice is a matter of concern in the western world. However, there has been minimal exploration of environmental injustice outside of the U.S, with all existing non- U.S. based literature sparse and narrowly defined, relating to either the export of environmental risk, economic domination of first nations' peoples or third world countries resources. Two case studies, within a medium sized regional city, were conducted to both ascertain the existence of environmental injustice in Australia, and identify the causative mechanisms. Cases were examined within an overall framework of environmental justice theory, with discussion underpinned by a rational choice theory analytical approach. Census data for the SLAs of Garbutt and Stuart shows relatively high percentages of Indigenous residents and relatively low levels of household and family income living in close proximity to two Locally Undesirable Land Use developments – Townsville Airport (Garbutt) and Stuart Creek Correctional Centre (Stuart) during 1996 - 2006. Accordingly, the requisite conditions exist that allow for a determination of environmental injustice in a regional city in Australia. Additional qualitative research uncovered the social, political and economic factors and policies that created environmental injustice. The qualitative data shows that environmental injustice in a regional city in Australia is associated with the existence of wider social injustices. The environmental injustice found to exist arose over time due to an unintended interplay between a least cost approach to siting both LULU's and homes, and social/political factors. Social/political factors identified during this research as being part of the causative process of environmental injustice were a pro-development/growth stance by government and the people, as shown in public (and popular) demand for and lack of resistance to development of the LULU's studied; personal preferences in housing locational choice, as reflected in decisions about the others whom people ... Thesis First Nations James Cook University, Australia: ResearchOnline@JCU
institution Open Polar
collection James Cook University, Australia: ResearchOnline@JCU
op_collection_id ftjamescook
language unknown
description Environmental injustice is a matter of concern in the western world. However, there has been minimal exploration of environmental injustice outside of the U.S, with all existing non- U.S. based literature sparse and narrowly defined, relating to either the export of environmental risk, economic domination of first nations' peoples or third world countries resources. Two case studies, within a medium sized regional city, were conducted to both ascertain the existence of environmental injustice in Australia, and identify the causative mechanisms. Cases were examined within an overall framework of environmental justice theory, with discussion underpinned by a rational choice theory analytical approach. Census data for the SLAs of Garbutt and Stuart shows relatively high percentages of Indigenous residents and relatively low levels of household and family income living in close proximity to two Locally Undesirable Land Use developments – Townsville Airport (Garbutt) and Stuart Creek Correctional Centre (Stuart) during 1996 - 2006. Accordingly, the requisite conditions exist that allow for a determination of environmental injustice in a regional city in Australia. Additional qualitative research uncovered the social, political and economic factors and policies that created environmental injustice. The qualitative data shows that environmental injustice in a regional city in Australia is associated with the existence of wider social injustices. The environmental injustice found to exist arose over time due to an unintended interplay between a least cost approach to siting both LULU's and homes, and social/political factors. Social/political factors identified during this research as being part of the causative process of environmental injustice were a pro-development/growth stance by government and the people, as shown in public (and popular) demand for and lack of resistance to development of the LULU's studied; personal preferences in housing locational choice, as reflected in decisions about the others whom people ...
format Thesis
author Dumont, Elizabeth Lillian
spellingShingle Dumont, Elizabeth Lillian
The role of policy in the creation and perpetuation of environmental injustice: two case studies in an Australian regional city
author_facet Dumont, Elizabeth Lillian
author_sort Dumont, Elizabeth Lillian
title The role of policy in the creation and perpetuation of environmental injustice: two case studies in an Australian regional city
title_short The role of policy in the creation and perpetuation of environmental injustice: two case studies in an Australian regional city
title_full The role of policy in the creation and perpetuation of environmental injustice: two case studies in an Australian regional city
title_fullStr The role of policy in the creation and perpetuation of environmental injustice: two case studies in an Australian regional city
title_full_unstemmed The role of policy in the creation and perpetuation of environmental injustice: two case studies in an Australian regional city
title_sort role of policy in the creation and perpetuation of environmental injustice: two case studies in an australian regional city
publishDate 2013
url https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/33656/1/33656-dumont-2013-thesis.pdf
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation https://doi.org/10.25903/swtr-bb51
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/33656/
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/33656/1/33656-dumont-2013-thesis.pdf
Dumont, Elizabeth Lillian (2013) The role of policy in the creation and perpetuation of environmental injustice: two case studies in an Australian regional city. Masters (Research) thesis, James Cook University.
op_rights open
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25903/swtr-bb51
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