4.2 Article

Which came first? Toxic facilities, minority move-in, and environmental justice

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JOURNAL OF URBAN AFFAIRS
卷 23, 期 1, 页码 1-21

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BLACKWELL PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1111/0735-2166.00072

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Previous research suggests that minority residential ai-eas have a disproportionate likelihood of hosting various environmental hazards. Some critics have responded that the contemporary correlation of race and hazards may reflect post-siting minority move-in, perhaps because of a risk effect on housing costs, rather than discrimination in siting. This article examines the disproportionate siting and minority move-in hypotheses in Los Angeles County by reconciling tract geography and data over three decades with firm-level information on the initial siting dates for toxic storage and disposal facilities. Using simple t-tests, logit analysis, and a novel simultaneous model, we find that disproportionate siting matters more than disproportionate minority move-in in the sample area. Racial transition is also an important predictor of siting, suggesting a role for multiracial organizing in resisting new facilities.

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