Green Gentrification and Environmental Injustice - Heather E. Campbell, Adam Eckerd, Yushim Kim

Green Gentrification and Environmental Injustice

A Complexity Approach to Policy
Buch | Hardcover
XII, 202 Seiten
2024 | 2024
Springer International Publishing (Verlag)
978-3-031-65099-4 (ISBN)
171,19 inkl. MwSt

This book argues that, given the complex nature of the urban environment, we cannot find one optimal solution to reducing environmental injustice, in part because there is no singular cause. Environmental injustice emerges in particular settings because of the combined and interdependent effects of a variety of different policy and community characteristics. The authors argue that addressing these interlinked problems requires an understanding of the clusters of community and contextual factors that combine in a variety of ways to both create problems and imply policy approaches to managing them. They argue for the use of complexity-informed  methods to assist in making public policy choices, such as Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA) and Agent-based Modeling (ABM), to enable us to better identify plausible solutions for specific contexts.

This volume offers a new perspective for strategically managing urban policy that considers the risk of gentrification and gentrification-related displacement, with the ultimate goal of improving social justice. Environmental injustice, pollution remediation, gentrification, and displacement are interlinked problems, all of which impinge on social justice in US cities. However, public policy research, and often practice as well, has tended to separately consider urban policy issues such as environmental injustice, brownfields and other pollution remediation, how to redevelop neighborhoods, and how to contend with gentrification and displacement. In this book the authors take a new perspective to such intertwined urban policy issues, using complexity thinking and, more importantly, complex adaptive systems approaches, in order to develop context-sensitive policy approaches to managing these ongoing problems.

 

Heather E. Campbell is Thornton F. Bradshaw Professor of Public Policy and  Director, Division of Politics & Economics at Claremont Graduate University in California, USA.

Adam Eckerd is an Associate Professor and PhD Program Director at the School of Public Service at Old Dominion University.

Yushim Kim is an Associate Professor at the School of Public Affairs, a Senior Sustainability Scholar at Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability, and a Graduate Faculty in Complex Adaptive Systems Science at Arizona State University.
 

Chapter 1. Overview of the Issues and Introduction to Our Approach.- Chapter 2. The Environmental Injustice Problem and Its Links to Gentrification and Displacement: Literature Review.- Chapter 3. Complexity Approach to Urban Systems.- Chapter 4. Conceptual Clarification: Gentrification, and Displacement.- Chapter 5. New Amenities that Provide Jobs: Consequences of Density and Segregation.- Chapter 6. Clusters of Conditions for Green Gentrification.- Chapter 7. Simulating the Consequences of Policies that Improve Environmental Conditions.- Chapter 8. Mitigating Displacement from Green Gentrification: Examining the Role of Housing-Cost Control Measures.- Chapter 9. Distillations and Policy Recommendations.

Erscheinungsdatum
Zusatzinfo XII, 202 p. 32 illus., 31 illus. in color.
Verlagsort Cham
Sprache englisch
Maße 155 x 235 mm
Themenwelt Naturwissenschaften Biologie Ökologie / Naturschutz
Naturwissenschaften Geowissenschaften
Schlagworte Complex Adaptive Systems • complexity studies • environmental justice • Gentrification displacement • green gentrification • Neighborhood Change
ISBN-10 3-031-65099-9 / 3031650999
ISBN-13 978-3-031-65099-4 / 9783031650994
Zustand Neuware
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