The Supervision of Environmental Risk: The Case of HCB Waste or Botany/Randwick?
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-18, 01:22authored byPeggy James
The governance activities of capital and the state include attempts to control the timing and spacing of social activities such as the production of environmental risks and settlement of different social groups. The supervisory activities that have shaped the environmental and social history of the Botany/Randwick area are identified here, to examine how the HCB waste risk developed in that community. The analysis shows that multiple environmental risks and an ethnically diverse, working class community have been brought together in space to create environmental injustice. Analysing the governance of one environmental risk like hexachlorobenzene (HCB) waste may not increase understanding about communities facing multiple environmental risks or the supervisory processes that lead to the unfair accumulation of risks for particular places or social groups. Lessons from the environmental justice movement suggest that reframing problems like HCB waste management at Botany/Randwick as distributive justice issues may contribute to governance arrangements that better manage multiple risks and pollution sources in space affecting marginalised communities.
History
Publication title
Journal of Environmental Management
Volume
90
Issue
4
Pagination
1576-1582
ISSN
0301-4797
Department/School
School of Humanities
Publisher
Academic Press Ltd Elsevier Science Ltd
Place of publication
24-28 Oval Rd, London, England, Nw1 7Dx
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Expanding knowledge in built environment and design