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Full-Text Articles in Law
Warren County's Legacy For Mexico's Border Maquiladoras, Amelia Simpson
Warren County's Legacy For Mexico's Border Maquiladoras, Amelia Simpson
Golden Gate University Environmental Law Journal
This Article explores the legacy of the U.S. environmental justice movement for the U.S.-Mexico border region. Part I introduces the case of Metales y Derivados, an abandoned, U.S.-owned maquiladora factory in Tijuana, Mexico, and the community’s struggle to compel cleanup of toxic waste at the site. In the context of environmental justice, Metales y Derivados illustrates a complex intersection of histories and cultures, international trade policy, and movement building. Part II discusses how racism, a defining element of the environmental justice movement, is often minimized and even denied in Latin America, despite studies documenting its persistence. Part III examines obstacles …
Sb 115: California's Response To Environmental Justice - Process Over Substance, Caroline Farrell
Sb 115: California's Response To Environmental Justice - Process Over Substance, Caroline Farrell
Golden Gate University Environmental Law Journal
This article discusses California’s development of an institutional framework for addressing environmental justice through the Governor’s Office of Planning and Research (“OPR”) and the California Environmental Protection Agency (“Cal/EPA”). It will demonstrate the ways these agencies’ foci have been on coordination as well as formulating guidelines. Further, the article’s purpose is to point out that while these guidelines provide important tools for environmental justice advocates, they do not provide any substantive guarantees that disproportionate impacts will not occur in communities of color and low income populations.
Environmental Justice Comes Full Circle: Warren County Before And After, Dollie Burwell, Luke W. Cole
Environmental Justice Comes Full Circle: Warren County Before And After, Dollie Burwell, Luke W. Cole
Golden Gate University Environmental Law Journal
This article/remembrance chronicles the Warren County struggle. It begins before the protests that thrust it into the national spotlight, examining the factors that led to the struggle in the first place. It touches on the protests themselves, and then recounts part of the Warren County story that is not well known: the ultimate detoxification of the polychlorinated biphenyls (“PCBs”) site. Finally, it examines the legacy of the Warren County struggle, both nationally and locally in the county itself. In places, it self-consciously departs from the third person to describe in first person narrative (presented in the italicized portions of the …