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Environmental
Justice

About

What is Environmental Justice?

"Environmental justice is the fair treatment and meaningful involvement of all people regardless of race, color, national origin, or income with respect to the development, implementation and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations and policies."
                             US Environmental Protection Agency

 

Ethics

Related NASW Code of Ethics Ethical Standards

  • 6.  Social Workers' Ethical Responsibilities to the Broader Society

    • 6.01  - Social Welfare

      • Social workers should promote the general welfare of society, from local to global levels, and the development of people, their communities, and their environments. Social workers should advocate for living conditions conducive to the fulfillment of basic human needs and should promote social, economic, political, and cultural values and institutions that are compatible with the realization of social justice.
        ​

    • 6.02 - Public Participation​

      • Social workers should facilitate informed participation by the public in shaping social policies and institutions.
        ​

    • 6.04 - Social and Political Action

      • (a) Social workers should engage in social and political action that seeks to ensure that all people have equal access to the resources, employment, services, and opportunities they require to meet their basic human needs and to develop fully. Social workers should be aware of the impact of the political arena on practice and should advocate for changes in policy and legislation to improve social conditions to meet basic human needs and promote social justice.

      • (b) Social workers should act to expand choice and opportunity for all people, with special regard for vulnerable, disadvantaged, oppressed, and exploited people and groups.

      • (c) Social workers should promote conditions that encourage respect for cultural and social diversity within the United States and globally. Social workers should promote policies and practices that demonstrate respect for difference, support the expansion of cultural knowledge and resources, advocate for programs and institutions that demonstrate cultural competence, and promote policies that safeguard the rights of and confirm equity and social justice for all people.

      • (d) Social workers should act to prevent and eliminate domination of, exploitation of, and discrimination against any person, group, or class on the basis of race, ethnicity, national origin, color, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, age, marital status, political belief, religion, immigration status, or mental or physical ability.

Orgs

Environmental Justice Organizations

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Environmental Working Group

The Environmental Working Group's is a nonprofit organization with a mission to empower people to live healthier lives in a healthier environment. They are dedicated to protecting human health and the environment.

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Climate Justice Alliance

The Climate Justice Alliance is a non-governmental collective of over 70 rural & urban community-based organizations focused on sustainability, development of underrepresented communities, race and ethnicity, economic development, and poverty alleviation — all with the wider aim of addressing climate change.

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Communities for a Better Environment

The mission of CBE is to build people’s power in California’s communities of color and low income communities to achieve environmental health and justice by preventing and reducing pollution and building green, healthy and sustainable communities and environments.

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Sunrise Movement

The Sunrise Movement is a youth movement to stop climate change and create millions of good jobs in the process. They have created groups of young people to make climate change an urgent priority across America, end the corrupting influence of fossil fuel executives on our politics, and elect leaders who stand up for the health and wellbeing of all people.

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Sierra Club

 Sierra Club Foundation is a 501(c)(3) organization engages in lobbying politicians to promote environmentalist policies, which include sustainable energy and mitigating global warming, opposition to the use of coal, hydropower, and nuclear power.

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350

350 is an international environmental organization which addresses the climate crisis. 350's goal is to end the use of fossil fuels and transition to renewable energy by building a global, grassroots movement.

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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

The Environmental Protection Agency is an independent executive agency of the United States federal government tasked with environmental protection matters.

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Green for All

 Green for All's mission is "...to work at the intersection of the environmental, economic, and racial justice movements to advance solutions to poverty and pollution."

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Intersectional

Environmentalist

IE 501(c)(3) is a climate justice collective radically imagining a more equitable + diverse future of environmentalism.

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Greenpeace is a global network of independent campaigning organizations that use peaceful protest and creative communication to expose global environmental problems and promote solutions that are essential to a green and peaceful future.

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Earthjustice

Earthjustice is a nonprofit public interest environmental law organization. Mission is to wield the power of law & the strength of partnership to protect people’s health, to preserve magnificent places and wildlife, to advance clean energy, &  to combat climate change.

Please note:  AdvanceSocialJustice.net recognizes that as society progresses, what is defined as inclusive, anti-biased terminology and vocabulary continually evolves. Due to this, specific terms and definitions that are used within the resources posted on this website may be outdated. While this website will continuously be updated with resources that will help you be prepared with up-to-date information, it is encouraged that you engage in ongoing dialogue and learning to remain informed on inclusive and anti-biased terminology to use in your practice. 

Resources

Environmental Justice Resources

Articles

Environmental Justice at the Heart of Social Work Practice: Greening the Profession

Lena Dominelli
 

Citation: 

Dominelli, L. (2013). Environmental justice at the heart of social work practice: Greening the profession. International Journal of Social Welfare, 22(4), 431-439.

Rethinking Social Work's Interpretation of ‘Environmental Justice’: From Local to Global

Dawn Phillip & Michael Reisch
 

Citation: 

Philip, D., & Reisch, M. (2015). Rethinking social work's interpretation of ‘environmental justice’: From local to global. Social Work Education, 34(5), 471-483.

Promoting environmental justice through green social work practice: A key challenge for practitioners and educators

Lena Dominelli
 

Citation: 

Dominelli, L. (2014). Promoting environmental justice through green social work practice: A key challenge for practitioners and educators. International Social Work, 57(4), 338-345.

Environmental justice and social work: A call to expand the social work profession to include environmental justice.

Dominoe Jarvis 
 

Citation: 

Jarvis, D. (2013). Environmental justice and social work: A call to expand the social work profession to include environmental justice. Columbia Social Work Review, 4, 36-45.

Environmental justice is a social justice issue: Incorporating environmental justice into social work practice curricula

Ramona Beltrán, Alice Hacker, & Stephanie Begun

Citation: 

Beltrán, R., Hacker, A., & Begun, S. (2016). Environmental justice is a social justice issue: Incorporating environmental justice into social work practice curricula. Journal of Social Work Education, 52(4), 493-502.

Sustainable social work: An environmental justice framework for social work education

Samantha Teixeira & Amy Krings
 

Citation: 

Teixeira, S., & Krings, A. (2015). Sustainable social work: An environmental justice framework for social work education. Social Work Education, 34(5), 513-527.

Promoting Environmental Justice and Sustainability in Social Work Practice in Rural Community: A Systematic Review.

Haorui Wu, Meredith Greig, & Catherine Bryan


Citation: 

Wu, H., Greig, M., & Bryan, C. (2022). Promoting Environmental Justice and Sustainability in Social Work Practice in Rural Community: A Systematic Review. Social Sciences, 11(8), 336. 

Environmental justice: A call for action for social workers.

PK Shajahan & Pooja Sharma
 

Citation: 

Shajahan, P. K., & Sharma, P. (2018). Environmental justice: A call for action for social workers. International Social Work, 61(4), 476-480.

Social work students’ perspective on environmental justice: Gaps and challenges for preparing students

Jessica L. Decker Sparks, Katie Massey Combs & Jennifer Yu
 

Citation: 

Decker Sparks, J. L., Combs, K. M., & Yu, J. (2019). Social work students’ perspective on environmental justice: Gaps and challenges for preparing students. Journal of Community Practice, 27(3-4), 476-486

Environmental Justice at the Heart of Social Work Practice: Greening the Profession

Lena Dominelli
 

Citation: 

Dominelli, L. (2013). Environmental justice at the heart of social work practice: Greening the profession. International Journal of Social Welfare, 22(4), 431-439.

Promoting social and environmental justice to support Indigenous partnerships in urban ecosystem restoration

Monique Mae Hall, Priscilla M. Wehi , Hemi Whaanga, Erana T. Walker, Jonni Hazeline Koia, & Kiri Joy Wallace

Citation: 

Hall, M. M., Wehi, P. M., Whaanga, H., Walker, E. T., Koia, J. H., & Wallace, K. J. (2021). Promoting social and environmental justice to support Indigenous partnerships in urban ecosystem restoration. Restoration Ecology, 29(1), 1-7.

Climate Change and Public Health: How Social Workers Can Advocate for Environmental Justice

Kate Jackson
 

Citation: 

Jackson, K. (2022). Climate change and public health: How social workers can advocate for environmental justice. Social Work Today, 17(6), 10.

Intersectional Environmental Justice and Population Health Inequalities: A Novel Approach

Camila H. Alvarez & Clare Rosenfeld Evans
 

Citation: 

Alvarez, C. H., & Evans, C. R. (2021). Intersectional environmental justice and population health inequalities: A novel approach. Social Science & Medicine, 269.

Other Types of Articles

Articles

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Journal Articles

Podcasts

Podcasts

The Social Work Stories Podcast

Eco Social Work and Climate Justice Ep. 28

inSocialWork
Podcast Series

Episode 189 -
Environmental Justice

Upaya

Podcast Series

Social and Environmental Justice (2021)

The Agents of Change in Environmental Justice Podcast 

Social and Environmental Justice (2021)

Recalling the Past to Shape the Future

A Podcast on Environmental Injustice

inSocialWork Podcast Series

Social Work Research on Global Environmental Change: Past, Present, and Future Directions

The Everyday Activist

Podcast Series

Climate

Justice Y'all

Podcast Series

EcoJustice

Radio

Podcast Series

Living Downstream: The Environmental Justice Podcast

Podcast Series by NPR

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Videos

Videos

Social Work Education: Environmental Justice

What is Green Social Work?

Climate Justice
is Social Justice

Social Impact LIVE: Climate Change and Environmental Justice

Environmental Social Work:
A Call to Action

Environmental justice | Social Inequality

A Brief History of Environmental Justice

Social justice, environmental justice, climate justice, and the injustice of it all.

Webinars

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Legislation

 Legislation Search Tools

This search tool lets you search pending bills in Congress, track their status, read the legislation in its entirety, and view roll call votes.

Provided by the National Conference of State Legislatures, this search tool tracks environmental health bills that have been introduced in the 50 states, territories and Washington, D.C.
 

Provided by Harvard University's Environmental and Energy, this tracker is designed to provide up-to-date information on the Biden administration’s environmental justice commitments, and progress made on those commitments.

Use this page to browse bills in the U.S. Congress related to the subject Environmental Protection, as determined by the Library of Congress.

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Tools and More

Other Tools and Resources

EJScreen is an EPA's environmental justice mapping and screening tool that provides EPA with a nationally consistent dataset and approach for combining environmental and demographic socioeconomic indicators.

This fact sheet was created by the EPA to learn more about Environmental Justice as well as the Office Of Environmental Justice

Drafted and adopted in 1991 at the National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit, this document serves as a guidepost for the movement. Here are the 17 principles, reprinted in full from the Environmental Justice Resource Center's site.

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It is with gratitude and humility that it is acknowledged that this website was developed on the ancestral and unceded territory of the  Piscataway People. Please join in remembering the Indigenous Peoples' histories and sacred connection to this region. We honor the Piscataway Elders and other Indigenous caretakers of these lands, the Indigenous Peoples today, and generations to come. 
 





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