| Class Sessions | Readings | 
| Part I: Introduction, Theories, and Histories of Environmental Justice | 
| 1. Several Founding Documents of Environmental Justice | 
Bullard, “Environmentalism and Social Justice,” pp. 1–20Moore and Gauna, letter to Jay D. HairDelegates to the First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit, “The Principles of Environmental Justice”Bassey et al., letter to George W. BushBullard et al.,“Toxic Wastes and Race at Twenty: 1987–2007,”  pp. x–14 | 
| 2. Histories of the Environmental Justice Movement | 
Cole and Foster, “A History of the Environmental Justice Movement,” pp. 19–33Pellow, Garbage Wars, pp. 1–99, 161–169Pulido, Environmentalism and Economic Justice, pp. 1–56, 191Suagee, “Turtle’s War Party”  Other Resources 
Taylor, “American Environmentalism”Sze and London, “Environmental Justice at the Crossroads” | 
| 3. Theories of Environmental Justice | 
LaDuke, All Our Relations, pp. 1–6Coates, Between the World and Me, pp. 149–152Kuehn, “A Taxonomy of Environmental Justice”Been, “What’s Fairness Got to Do with It?” pp. 1001–1009 (Introduction) and 1027–1068 (Part III)Harvey, Justice, Nature and the Geography of Difference, Chapter 8: pp. 176–204 Other Resources 
Auyero and Swistun, Flammable, pp. 1–20, 140–160Lazarus, “Pursuing ‘Environmental Justice’”Pellow, “Environmental Inequality Formation” | 
| 4. Causation | 
Summers, “‘Dirty’ Industries”Rabin, “Expulsive Zoning,” pp. 101–121Mohai and Saha, “Which Came First, People or Pollution?”Pulido, “A Critical Review of the Methodology of Environmental Racism Research” Other Resources 
Been and Gupta, “Coming to the Nuisance or Going to the Barrios?” pp. 3–32 Environmental Impact Assessment 
National Environmental Policy ActCouncil on Environmental Quality RegulationsCouncil on Environmental Quality, Environmental Justice Guidance, pp. 7–16In the Matter of Louisiana Energy Services, L.P., Parts I.A and III.Standing Rock Sioux Tribe et al. v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, pp. 21–23, 47–54 Site Cleanup and Enforcement 
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, § 9607Freeland, “Environmental Justice and the Brownfields Revitalization Act of 2001” | 
| Part II. Advancing Environmental Justice: Risk, Regulation, Knowledge Creation, Land Use, Litigation, and Mobilization | 
| 5. Policymaking: Risk Assessment, Cost-Benefit Analysis | 
Walker, “Everything Is a Human Being,” pp. 139–152Pulido, “Flint, Environmental Racism, and Racial Capitalism”  Risk and Assessment 
Carnegie Commission, “Risk and the Environment,” pp. 76–78Kuehn, “The Environmental Justice Implications of Quantitative Risk Assessment,” parts II (pp. 107–116) and III (116–129) Cost-Benefit Analysis 
Sunstein and Hahn, “A New Executive Order for Improving Federal Regulation?” pp. 1489–1516Ackerman and Heinzerling, “Pricing the Priceless,” pp. 1553–1578 Other resources 
National Environmental Justice Advisory Council, “Ensuring Risk Reduction in Communities with Multiple Stressors”Tickner et al., “The Precautionary Principle in Action”Livermore and Revesz, “Rethinking Health-Based Environmental Standards,” pp. 1185–1190 (Introduction) and 1200–1227 (Part II)American Lung Association v. Environmental Protection AgencyWhitman v. American Trucking Associations, Inc.Michigan et al. v. Environmental Protection Agency, pp. 1–17 | 
| 6. Forms of Regulation: Standard-Setting, Markets, Disclosure | Standard-Setting 
Lazarus and Tai, “Integrating Environmental Justice into EPA Permitting Authority,” pp. 617–649 Market-Based Regulation 
Johnson, “Economics v. Equity,” pp. 111–124, 143–149 Disclosure 
Karkkainen, “Information as Environmental Regulation,” pp. 259–294 Other Resources 
Driesen, “The Ends and Means of Pollution Control,” pp. 64–96Overdevest and Mayer, “Harnessing the Power of Information Through Community Monitoring,” pp. 1495–1506 (Part II)Memorandum from Gary S. GuzyU.S. Government Accountability Office, “Environmental Justice”Karkkainen, “Bottlenecks and Baselines”U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of General Counsel, “Plan EJ 2014”Environmental Justice Leadership Forum, Comment Letter on Clean Power Plan | 
| 7. Scales of Action: Federal, State, and Local Policies to Advance Environmental Justice | Federal Responses 
Federal Actions to Address Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations, Exec. Order No. 12,898U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “EJ 2020 Action Agenda” [skim] State Actions and Cooperative Federalism 
Foster, “Environmental Justice in an Era of Devolved Collaboration,” pp. 472–494 Tribal Environmental Regulation 
Ranco, “Models of Tribal Environmental Regulation”  Community-Based Strategies 
Loh and Sugerman-Brozan, “Environmental Justice Organizing for Environmental Health” Other Resources 
Targ, “The States’ Comprehensive Approach to Environmental Justice,” pp. 171–184City of Boston Mayor’s Office of Resilience and Racial Equity, “Resilient Boston: An Equitable and Connected City”Commonwealth of Massachusetts Executive Office of Environmental Affairs, “Environmental Justice Policy”Rechtschaffen, “Competing Visions: EPA and the States Battle for the Future of Environmental Enforcement” Utility Air Regulatory Group v. Environmental Protection Agency, et al., pp. 1–29H.R. 2486, Equity and Inclusion Enforcement Act | 
| 8. The Production of Environmental Knowledge, Litigation, Mobilization | The Production of Environmental Knowledge 
Corburn, Street Science, pp. 47–77Arcaya et al., “Community Change and Resident Needs: Designing a Participatory Action Research Study in Metropolitan Boston”  Mobilization 
Bullard and Johnson, “Environmental Justice” Other Resources 
Haraway, “Situated Knowledges”Appadurai, “The Right to Research” Corburn, Street Science, pp. 25–46Fischer, Citizens, Experts, and the Environment, pp. ix–28Sze, Noxious New York, pp. 143–211Morello-Frosch et al., “Citizens, Science, and Data Judo,” pp. 371–392Bryant and Hockman, “A Brief Comparison of the Civil Rights Movement and the Environmental Justice Movement,”  pp. 23–26 | 
| 9. Land Use Planning and Environmental Justice | 
Arnold, “Planning Milagros,” pp. 3–10, 89–123Been,  “Compensated Siting Proposals,” pp. 787–796Cole, “Empowerment as the Key to Environmental Protection,” pp. 661–683Calpotura, “Why the Law?” Other Resources 
Anguelovski, Neighborhood as Refuge, pp. 195–219Dowdell v. City of Apopka, pp. 1181–1188 Litigation 
South Camden Citizens in Action v. N.J. Dept. of Env. Prot., pp. 452, 481–495Bean v. Southwestern Waste Management CorporationR.I.S.E. v. KayDraft Revised Guidance for Investigating Title VI Administrative Complaints Challenging Permits, pp. 39,667–39,684Comments on Draft Revised Guidance for Investigating Title VI Administrative Complaints Challenging PermitsComplaint Under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 [skim]Letter from Rafael DeLeon to Christopher Reardon (Angelita C. preliminary finding)Agreement Between Cal. Dep’t of Pesticide Regulation and U.S. EPA (Angelita C. settlement). | 
| Part III. Selected Contemporary Environmental Justice Issues | 
| 10. Environmental Gentrification, Food Justice, Prisons | 
Chavez, “Wrath of Grapes Boycott Speech”Penniman, “Radical Farmers Use Fresh Food to Fight Racial Injustice and the New Jim Crow” Hilmers et al. “Neighborhood Disparities in Access to Healthy Foods and Their Effects on Environmental Justice”Checker, “Wiped Out by the ‘Greenwave’”Braz and Gilmore, “Joining Forces” Other Resources 
Anguelovski et al., “Assessing Green Gentrification in Historically Disenfranchised Neighborhoods” | 
| 11. Hazard Mitigation and Inequality | 
Pastor et al., “In the Wake of the Storm,” Chapter 1Anguelovski et al., “Equity Impacts of Urban Land Use Planning for Climate Adaptation” Lee and Van Zandt, “Housing Tenure and Social Vulnerability to Disasters”Hino et al., “Managed Retreat as a Response to Natural Hazard Risk”Hersher and Benincasa, “How Federal Disaster Money Favors The Rich” Other Resources 
Cutter and Finch, “Temporal and Spatial Changes in Social Vulnerability to Natural Hazards” | 
| 12. Disaster Recovery and Inequality | 
Howell and Elliott,“Damages Done”Gotham, “Limitations, Legacies, and Lessons”Capps, “Why Are These Tiny Towns Getting So Much Hurricane Harvey Aid?” Other Resources 
Texas Low Income Housing Information Service v. Ben Carson and HUDGreater New Orleans Fair Housing Action Center et al. v. St. Bernard Parish et al. | 
| 13. Movement Building | 
Cole and Foster, “Processes of Struggle,” pp. 103–133Buford, “Has the Moment for Environmental Justice Been Lost?”116th Congress, 1st Session, H. Res. 109Lim, “How the Green New Deal Can Deliver Land Justice”  Other resources: 
Pellow, Resisting Global Toxics, pp. 73–95Anthony, “The Environmental Justice Movement” pp. 91–98Schlosberg, “Reconceiving Environmental Justice”  | 
| 14. Just Transition | 
International Climate Justice Network, “Bali Principles of Climate Justice” Sze and Yeampierre, “Just Transition and Just Green Enough,” pp. 61–73Loh and Shear, “Solidarity Economy and Community Development” Boyce and Pastor, “Clearing the Air” Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change,“Adoption of the Paris Agreement”  Other Resources 
Cleveland National Forest Foundation v. San Diego Association of Governments, pp. 1–25Massachusetts v. Environmental Protection Agency, pp. 1–6, 18–32Loh and Eng, eds., “Environmental Justice and the Green Economy” |