 |
Steve Wing, associate professor of epidemiology at the University
of North Carolina School of Public Health in Chapel Hill, North Carolina,
conducts research on occupational and environmental health. Recent
work has focused on ionizing radiation, industrial animal production,
and the built environment. He is a founding member of the North Carolina
Environmental Justice Network.
|
Since coalescing in the 1980s, the environmental justice movement has become
one of the many forces influencing public health conditions and environmental
health science. Shaped by principles of civil rights, democracy, and opposition
to colonialism, environmental justice advocates echo an older and broader push
to consider population health an issue of social justice, not merely the absence
of disease in individuals. Linking American Indian and other non-European cultures’ respect
for a natural world in which the human species is only a dependent part, with
principles of sustainability, self-determination, and cultural integrity, environmental
justice advocates have insisted that environmental quality itself is an issue
of social justice (Bullard 1993).
Knowledge in environmental science and medicine reflects the needs, interests,
and perspectives of professionals, the business community, and government agencies
that support research (Wing 2002). These institutions shape the choice of questions,
research designs, and cultural norms regarding interpretation of data and public
health implications (Wing 1998). Facing the routine use of science by institutions
that create and regulate environmental hazards, the environmental justice movement
has sought scientific documentation about exposures and health conditions that
reflects the values and needs of affected communities. Environmental, social,
and medical scientists have responded with empirical research that is driven
by community concerns related to contamination, health, and justice. The development
of partnerships and programs of support by private and government agencies,
notably the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) Environmental
Justice: Partnerships for Communication extramural grant program, started under
the leadership of Dr. Kenneth Olden, brings prospects both for positive transformation
of science and health and for retrenchment and reinforcement of existing inequities.
In this article, I argue that what has been called “a science of environmental
justice” (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA) 2004), a science
that can serve as a knowledge base for public health advocacy, cannot develop
without revolutionary changes in both science and society. The developing science
of environmental justice could become accommodated to production and maintenance
of global environmental injustice, or it could promote efforts to reduce injustice
and promote sustainability. A historical perspective on the determinants of
public health and research about improvements in public health helps to place
prospects for a science of environmental justice in perspective. I begin by
considering inattention to popular struggles for health and justice in scientific
accounts of the causes of declines in mortality and improvements in life expectancy
in Europe and the United States during the 19th and 20th centuries.
The Role of Popular Movements in Epidemiologic Transition
Although the environmental justice movement emerged recently, the social
relations that create racial and economic disparities in health and environmental
conditions, the struggles against those disparities, and the scientific study
of the causes of determinants of health have a long history. Prospects and
challenges for creating a science of environmental justice that can contribute
to improved public health are evident in this history.
The term “epidemiologic transition” was introduced at about the
time when the 20th century epidemic of coronary heart disease (CHD) was near
its peak in the United States, cancer rates were increasing, and new and re-emerging
infectious diseases were not yet widely recognized as public health problems
in the West (Omran 1977). Epidemiologic transition was proposed as a description
of the West’s shift from a health profile dominated by infectious diseases
to one dominated by noninfectious diseases.
Mortality studies formed the basis for documenting epidemiologic transition
and evaluating its potential causes. Death rates are a crude way to evaluate
the state of public health. However, where there are legal requirements for
death registration, certification of causes of death, and participation in
population censuses, death rates provide a quick and empirical way to evaluate
how public health conditions vary over time and place. They also provide clear
evidence that environmental changes are powerful determinants of population
health over a time span when genetic change is minimal. Beginning in the middle
of the 19th century, death rates dropped markedly in the West as infectious
pandemics receded and mortality from common infectious diseases declined. Age-adjusted
mortality trends for England and Wales are shown in Figure 1 (McKeown 1979).
The mortality decline coincided with the revolution in microbiology brought
on by discoveries of Koch, Pasteur, and others in the second half of the 1800s
and the rise of scientific medicine in the 1900s. The prestige of medical and
public health science grew rapidly as pathogens were identified, vaccines and
antibiotics were developed, and the complex ecological relationships between
environmental conditions, disease vectors, and human hosts were described.
Therefore, it was almost medical heresy when medical historians and demographers
proposed that medicine had little to do with the decline of those very diseases
best understood by medical science. Carefully reconstructing mortality trends
through changes in disease definitions and diagnostic methods (McKeown and
Record 1962), McKeown (1979) estimated that approximately three-quarters of
the improvement in mortality rates in England and Wales between 1848-1854
and 1971 was due to declines in infectious disease mortality and found that
most of this decline occurred before the introduction of effective preventive
or curative measures. For example, respiratory tuberculosis accounted for 17.5%
of the fall in total mortality in this period; however, as shown in Figure
2, 86% of the decline occurred before introduction of streptomycin in 1947
(McKeown 1979). A similar pattern has been documented in other European countries
(McKeown et al. 1972) and the United States (McKinlay and McKinlay 1977).
So what caused the recession of infectious diseases if not advances in medical
science and access to care? McKeown and others argued that the most important
causes were improved nutrition, sanitation, and declines in the birth rate.
These factors limited the spread of water- and foodborne agents, reduced crowding,
and increased host resistance. In this view, the decline of infectious diseases
in the West had more to do with widespread improvements in environmental conditions
that affect most of the population, preventing the spread of disease and decreasing
susceptibility, than with specific medical services offered to individuals
one at a time, primarily after they become sick. From this classic public health
perspective, the work of sanitary engineers, food scientists, and industrial
hygienists deserves at least as much credit for health transformation as does
the work of medical scientists and medical practitioners.
In 1900 the leading cause of death in the United States was tuberculosis.
By 1940 it was CHD. As measured by death rates, the CHD epidemic peaked in
this country in 1968 (Stallones 1980). In 1978 epidemiologists, demographers,
and physicians met at a conference on the decline of CHD convened by the National
Heart Lung and Blood Institute to consider the causes of the decline (Havlik
and Feinleib 1979). In some respects their debate (Levy and Moskowitz 1982)
was parallel to the arguments over the role of medicine in the decline of infectious
diseases. Proponents of the role of medical care focused on improvements in
emergency medical services, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, coronary bypass
surgery, and new pharmacologic agents, whereas public health scientists cited
changes in diet, exercise, and smoking (Figure 3). Similar arguments were made
about declines in stroke mortality. Beginning in the early 1960s, only a few
years after the publication of the first randomized trials showing antihypertensive
therapies to be effective in reducing incidence of stroke among patients with
severe hypertension, and 40 years after the onset of the decline of stroke
mortality in the United States, arguments that stroke mortality declines were
caused by hypertension treatment began to appear in the medical literature
(Howard 1965; Wing 1984). The belief that antihypertensive medications have
been responsible for declines in stroke mortality persisted despite evidence
to the contrary (Bonita and Beaglehole 1989; Casper et al. 1992).
Debates over the causes of the rise and fall of the major diseases in populations
reveal the profound influence of scientific and popular cultures in shaping
directions of inquiry and explanations of health. The mainstream debate over
causes of declines of infectious and cardiovascular disease mortality pits
proponents of increased funding for medical sciences and access to clinical
services against proponents of increased funding for environmental science,
pollution prevention, food safety, health education, and the search for new
risk factors. Our scientific values, which privilege evidence from controlled
experiments over evidence from observations of complex ecological systems,
lead to a preference for specific biomedical explanations of complex public
health phenomena. Arguments for the role of medicine are reinforced by its
social prestige; high cost; the distress, needs, and vulnerabilities of sick
patients; and a cultural individualism (Tesh 1988). On the other hand, competing
public health explanations have gained substantial scientific credibility through
careful observational research and application of interventions based on understanding
of etiologic mechanisms. However, both medical and public health arguments
share the implication that the most important causes of declining disease rates
are factors over which professionals have control and responsibility. From
both perspectives, credit for improvements in public health largely accrues
to the scientists and practitioners who see themselves as responsible for assembling
basic scientific knowledge and applying that knowledge through engineering
design, public policy development, and provision of drugs, surgery, health
education, and other clinical services. Although socioeconomic improvement
has been included as an explanatory category in discussions of the decline
of both infectious (McKeown 1979) and noninfectious (Armstrong et al. 1998;
Havlik and Feinleib 1978) diseases, it has been considered primarily as a consequence
of the proper management of poverty by professionals responsible for the economy
and living conditions, a public health tradition since the 1840s (Hamlin 1995).
Left out of this picture of the determinants of health improvement is the
role of the majority of people who have less education, less income, poorer
living conditions, and poorer health than that of scientists, medical practitioners,
and other professionals. Omission of this population from scientific analysis
of the causes of epidemiologic transition and improved population health perpetuates
the perception that they have little understanding of health and little ability
to initiate positive changes on their own. However, reductions in pollution,
better housing, safer working conditions, a more nutritious and varied diet,
and improved educational opportunities are not simply services brought to people
who do not know enough to seek them on their own. Popular movements for improved
environmental, occupational, and living conditions existed throughout the historical
period of the recent epidemiologic transition. The academic literature documents
the support these movements received from some professionals (Fee and Brown
2005; Tedeschi et al. 2003; Waitzkin 1981); however, the role of laborers,
the rural poor, the colonized, and people subjected to racism and sexism--those
who are most affected by poor housing and sanitation, unsafe working conditions,
lack of educational opportunity, and low income--has received little attention
(Cooper et al. 1981). Professionals not only have little exposure to struggles
for labor and civil rights but are also in a conflicted position when they
work for or with institutions that benefit from a system in which poor living
conditions and low wages create privilege and profit by reducing costs of labor,
services, and pollution prevention. Those who lack basic conditions necessary
for good health, including safe housing, air, water, nutrition, working conditions,
and access to medical care, are ultimately the same people who organize to
bring themselves better health conditions. Unlike professionals, for whom these
conditions may be merely a subject of intellectual and occupational interest,
community members must choose to endure passively or to engage in a struggle
for change. This is the basis of the environmental justice movement.
Although the role of popular struggles in pubic health improvement has received
little attention from public health professionals, this may change, in part,
because a primary justification for government and foundation-supported programs
to promote partnerships between environmental justice activists and researchers
is that these programs will lead to health-promoting environmental changes.
NIEHS and other supporters of partnerships between researchers and community-based
organizations encourage evaluation of policy impacts because evidence of efficacy
is considered to be critical to future support and rational allocation of funding.
These policy impacts are beginning to be assessed (Bullard and Johnson 2000;
Minkler 2000).
During the 18th and 19th centuries, popular movements fought slavery, child
labor, and occupational hazards. They fought for civil rights, education and
suffrage for women and people of color, a living wage for workers, and access
to medical care and other services. Similarly, the environmental justice movement
is assembling scientific evidence in order to fight pollution, denial of basic
amenities, lack of access to clinical care, and unsafe working conditions (Bullard
and Johnson 2000; Shepard et al. 2002). Community-academic partnerships
could create greater interest in the roles of popular struggles in public health,
giving researchers insights about how community-based organizations affect
living and working conditions, and giving community members access to research
tools that help document impacts of their organizing on environmental conditions
and health.
A Science of Environmental Justice
The concept of a science of environmental justice may seem contradictory
or even oxymoronic to many scientists. What does science, an objective approach
to obtaining knowledge about nature, have to do with justice, a moral and legal
foundation for fairness in society? Study of causes of epidemiologic transition
show that scientists use values and assumptions that shape the kinds of knowledge
they create. The point of this example is not that medicine, public health,
or popular movements made the greatest impact on declines of infectious and
cardiovascular diseases in the 19th and 20th centuries; rather, it is that
scientific study of these phenomena has focused on what health professionals
do and has virtually ignored what people most affected by health threats do
for themselves. Science’s commitment to objectivity, empiricism, replication,
and other methodological principles does not change the fact that it is a product
of society and therefore is always affected by the values and perspectives
of that society, including values about justice (Wing 2003). In order to explain
why a science of environmental justice could both advance and impede advocacy
for public health, it is useful to consider some aspects of science and the
environmental justice movement that are in conflict.
Science, despite some diversity, has strong norms that are maintained through
the educational system, professional societies, and peer review. These norms
contribute to science’s capacity to produce useful knowledge, its enormous
prestige, and its economic importance. First, science is primarily ahistorical.
Generally, although scientists use specific materials, their interest is not
in particular places, times, or people but in properties and relationships
of abstracted parts of complex systems. This leads to a preference for studies
of specific toxins over complex mixtures and of specific diseases rather than
health or quality of life. Experiments and quasi-experimental observational
studies attempt, as much as possible, to hold constant all explanatory factors
except one, or at most a few, so that the independent effect of a factor on
the outcome can be isolated. The power of experimental designs and multivariate
analytic techniques of observational research derives from their success in
removing historical contexts and complex relationships (Wing 1994).
Second, scientific culture maintains, for the most part, a strong commitment
to a naive concept of objectivity based on insulating the scientist from historical
context and social values that could pollute research. This endeavor is impossible,
however, because social values are embedded in all language and concepts used
by scientists to choose good research questions, design experiments, and collect
and interpret data (Wing 2003). The process of removing social values from
research, then, becomes one of removing only those values that are not normative
in the scientific culture, values that appear alien, whereas those values that
are built into the sciences are not recognized as values at all. It is normative
to consider the role of medicine versus public health measures in the decline
of mortality, and unnoteworthy that the role of popular movements as a competing
explanation has not been addressed. A more rational approach to achieving objectivity
involves critical evaluation of the values embedded in science (Harding 1991).
Science has been developed and is dominated by well-educated white men (Harding
1991). The methods and knowledge produced by scientists have been extremely
useful in addressing problems of governments and industries in areas such as
agriculture, energy, communications, medicine, and the military. Women, people
of color, and people without the means to obtain science education have had
relatively little opportunity to become scientists. Historical and local ecological
perspectives of scientists are affected by their membership in professional
communities that are national and global. They are often geographically mobile,
lack life-long attachment to local, multigenerational communities, and have
little daily personal interaction with or commitment to local communities that
include economically and racially diverse members. In addition to its widely
respected positive features, science is marked by ahistoricism, naive objectivity,
and lack of representation of women and people of color.
The environmental justice movement, despite its diversity, has some common
characteristics that reflect its roots in traditional cultures and communities
that have experienced environmental threats. First, the interest of the environmental
justice movement is explicitly historical. It is engaged with problems, needs,
and ambitions of specific people at specific places and times rather than with
abstracted parts of a system. It is ecological in its perspective and places
high value on detailed narratives and knowledge about sources of environmental
contaminants, who benefits from their creation, and health, quality of life,
self-determination, and cultural integrity. Such narratives may be preferred
as evidence over measures of association between isolated parts of a system
investigated using experimental designs. Trust, loyalty, social justice, respect
for people, and environmental sustainability are valued more than an idealized
concept of detached objectivity. The environmental justice movement has been
led primarily by people of color, women, and people who live in communities
that are adversely affected by environmental problems created by industry and
government, the very institutions that are closest to science. These characteristics
conflict in several fundamental respects with the culture of science.
The scientific community is oriented toward assessing specific questions
and producing knowledge that assumes problems have technological solutions.
Evaluations of environmental concentrations of chemicals, their uptake in exposed
people, and biological effects produce information that might be used to set
an environmental standard and evaluate whether that standard is met. However,
this knowledge may be of little value to exposed communities if the chemical
is part of a complex mixture that is not assessed, if only one of several exposure
pathways is considered, if impacts on quality of life are not recognized as
an important issue, if effects on wildlife are ignored, or if contaminants
are placed disproportionately in communities that lack political power. Technical
solutions are fine, but for communities facing environmental injustice, their
value depends on the extent to which social justice is advanced.
Prospects for a Science of Environmental Justice
Despite these different values, science and the environmental justice movement
share important objectives that provide grounds for a science of environmental
justice. Identification of hazardous agents and knowledge about how people
become exposed can be of great value for self-protection, for pollution prevention,
and for remediation, issues that are of great concern in communities facing
environmental injustice. Studies of the location of pollution sources, unsafe
environments, and the racial and economic characteristics of communities with
environmental hazards provide an empirical basis for demonstrating patterns
of environmental injustice. These studies may become a tool that low-income
communities and people of color can use to organize locally, educate the general
public, petition government agencies, and take legal action to protect themselves
from unfair exposure (Bullard and Johnson 2000). Prevention of environmental
injustice is also a key to environmental sustainability because wealthy communities’ avoidance
of the negative environmental and health consequences of industrial production,
energy development, waste disposal, and transportation systems through transfer
of hazards and disamenities to other communities prevents a feedback between
benefits and costs of production and consumption. A community that can send
its waste to other places where people lack political power has little incentive
to reduce the generation of waste.
Remaining faithful to the shared goals of the science and environmental justice
communities can be difficult. Institutions that employ scientists may be closely
tied to the institutions that reap short-term gain from unjust environmental
practices, for example, the federal government, which chose low-income, rural
communities, including American Indian lands, for development and testing of
nuclear weapons. Furthermore, there is growing concern that public policies
and legal decisions of the last few decades have created strong incentives
for universities and other research institutions to commercialize research
to the detriment of public interest science (Center for Science in the Public
Interest 2003; Krimsky 2003). Universities hold patents on commercial products
and provide corporate funding for facilities, research, teaching, and graduate
students, and their faculty members are increasingly dependent on outside financial
support to maintain their own salary support and fund their research. The Institute
of Medicine notes that competition for extramural funding may have a negative
impact on integrity in research (Committee on Assessing Integrity in Research
Environments 2003). Integrity includes consideration of the social responsibility
of science. In this climate, scientists are discouraged from pursuing research
that requires intensive work with grassroots community organizations to develop
trust and understanding of local problems, holds only modest prospects for
extramural funding, and seeks to document environmental injustices or health
and safety problems connected to industries that support universities, lobby
government agencies, and contribute to the political campaigns of officials
who could influence university funding (Krimsky 2003; Wing 2002)
Grassroots organizations may also face difficulties in remaining faithful
to their principles and goals as they partner with researchers to build a science
of environmental justice. Community-based organizations have difficulty maintaining
financial support, especially compared with universities and other research
institutions, including industry groups. They often lack technical staff with
scientific, legal, and fiscal experience, have fewer politically powerful friends
and supporters, and their members have different race and class backgrounds
than people in research institutions. Grassroots environmental justice organizations
that become involved in science are in relationships with institutions that
have vastly more economic and political power. Community-university partnerships
that fund grassroots organizations can create pressures to divert efforts from
direct action and addressing basic community needs, including political empowerment,
to activities that are more beneficial to researchers and the organizations
that fund them. Community leaders with modest incomes and life styles are invited
to travel to far-away meetings, stay in nice hotels, and develop working relationships
with professionals who accept their own privileged position and reject militancy
about injustice. Although they develop knowledge and contacts, they spend time
away from the communities that need their leadership. This can create division
within communities because leaders obtain privileges that are not available
to others and become adapted to relationships with institutions that, historically,
have been viewed by the community with suspicion and distrust. Even grassroots
organizations and researchers with strong commitments to a science of environmental
justice face pressures to adopt colonial relationships in which scientists
publish papers and obtain grants, and local leaders provide community access
in exchange for prestige, perquisites, and funding. This situation creates
a science of environmental justice that perpetuates the very forces that maintain
injustice.
Prevention of colonial relationships between grassroots communities and privileged
research institutions requires members of both groups to conduct careful analysis
of relationships, motivations, and principles of justice as they pursue rigorous
research, education of both scientists and community members, and a healthier
environment. A focus on the long-term goals of the environmental justice movement,
which are in many respects profoundly democratic and utopian, can be promoted
by reinforcing connections to broader movements for popular democracy, peace,
and social justice. These connections are threatened by attempts to improve
the status and funding for environmental justice by separating it from the
broader movement in order to avoid competition for funding.
Conclusions
A science of environmental justice is a science for the people, applied research
that addresses issues of concern to communities experiencing environmental
injustice, poor public health conditions, and lack of political power. Like
research that is conducted in partnership with government regulatory agencies
and for-profit industry, policy changes resulting from a science of environmental
justice would not be instituted primarily by scientists, but by the organizations
they serve, requiring serious attention to communication and education about
science. Just as regulators use studies of dose response to set exposure standards,
and drug companies use clinical trials to market new agents, organizations
in the environmental justice movement use studies of environmental contamination,
human exposure, and disease to educate affected populations and advocate for
public health improvement. The potential for this relationship to affect public
health is suggested by the history of epidemiologic transition in Europe and
the United States, where evidence shows that declines in death rates for major
diseases occurred as a function of improvements in diet, sanitation, housing,
and workplace safety. The environmental justice movement is engaged with these
same issues, especially as they affect population groups with the highest disease
rates and the most to be gained from reduced exposures and increased access
to public services and medical care.
Although partnerships for a science of environmental justice hold great promise,
there are profound obstacles to development of any public interest science
in an era of expanding science in the private interest (Krimsky 2003). Promotion
of a science of environmental justice by visionary administrators in government
agencies, universities, and foundations is important. However, these institutions
can unwittingly foster colonial relationships with the populations that experience
environmental injustice. Therefore, development of a democratic science of
environmental justice ultimately depends on the strength of communities working
for social justice and transformation of the institutions that create environmental
injustices. Environmental health scientists can participate in strengthening
community organizations by providing technical assistance, education, and financial
support and by being ready to learn from them about the connections between
science, environmental justice, and public health.
Summary
The environmental justice movement represents community action to oppose
racial and economic inequities in the burden of environmental health hazards.
Bringing together traditions of labor, civil rights, economic justice, environmental,
and antiwar organizations, the environmental justice movement mobilizes to
improve living and working conditions and quality of life in communities that
have high disease rates and poor access to medical care and health-promoting
services. Historical evidence suggests these movements may play an important
role in public health improvement via their effects on the environment. For
example, most of the decline of mortality from infectious diseases between
the mid-19th and mid-20th centuries occurred before introduction of effective
medical interventions as a function of improved nutrition, sanitation, housing,
working conditions, and reduced crowding. These factors are also important
determinants of many noninfectious diseases. Environmental justice groups have
formed partnerships with scientists in order to document environmental hazards,
discriminatory patterns of exposure, and environmental diseases. These partnerships
can provide empirical evidence that is useful for community organizing and
grassroots efforts to promote policy change. Although scientists and communities
facing environmental injustices share some interests, differences in their
values and social privilege present barriers to the development of a progressive
science of environmental justice. Programs to promote such partnerships are
important, but they must avoid creation of colonial relationships and cooptation
of movements for democratic social change if they are to effectively contribute
to improved public health conditions.
doi:10.1289/ehp.7900 available via http://dx.doi.org/