Journal Environmental Justice - Ethnicity, Monitoring, Puerto Rico
FREE ACCESS now through July 10, 2018
By Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., 2018-07-04

The journal Environmental Justice (jEJ) is one of the most relevant pioneers in the field of Environmental Justice Research. The peer-review journal is published bimonthly, covering the impacts and environmental burdens that affect marginalized populations all over the world. Interdisciplinary reports on communities, industry, academia, government, and nonprofit organizations are considered in its editions including human health and the environment, natural science, technology, land use and urban planning, public and environmental policy, environmental history, legal history as it pertains to environmental justice, environmental sociology, anthropology of environmental, health disparities, and grassroots activities.

The jEJ is under the editorial leadership of Editor-in-Chief Sylvia Hood Washington, PhD, MSE, MPH, and senior Editor Kenneth Olden, PhD, ScD, LHD, among others.

FREE ACCESS now through July 10, 2018.
Read Now:

Fugitive Chemicals and Environmental Justice: A Model for Environmental Monitoring Following Climate-Related Disasters
Jaime Madrigano, Juan Camilo Osorio, Eddie Bautista, Ryan Chavez, Christine F. Chaisson, Erika Meza, Regina A. Shih, Ramya Chari Read Now

The Multiple Layers of Environmental Injustice in Contexts of (Un)natural Disasters: The Case of Puerto Rico Post-Hurricane Maria
Gustavo A. García-López Read Now

Racial and Ethnic Differences in Connectedness to Nature and Landscape Preferences Among College Students
Dorceta E. Taylor Read Now

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Image: © Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.