Environmental Justice: A Panoptic Overview Using Scientometrics
Since its initial introduction in the 1970s, the field of environmental justice (EJ) continues to grow, with significant contributions from the disciplines of sustainability science, geography, political science, public policy and administration, urban planning, law, and many others. Each of these d...
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doaj-56ab5cdccef94fa58c591db836efe0cb2020-11-25T00:36:35ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502018-03-01104102210.3390/su10041022su10041022Environmental Justice: A Panoptic Overview Using ScientometricsJake R. Nelson0Tony H. Grubesic1Center for Spatial Reasoning & Policy Analytics, College of Public Service & Community Solutions, Arizona State University, 411 N Central Avenue, Suite 400, Phoenix, AZ 85004, USACenter for Spatial Reasoning & Policy Analytics, College of Public Service & Community Solutions, Arizona State University, 411 N Central Avenue, Suite 400, Phoenix, AZ 85004, USASince its initial introduction in the 1970s, the field of environmental justice (EJ) continues to grow, with significant contributions from the disciplines of sustainability science, geography, political science, public policy and administration, urban planning, law, and many others. Each of these disciplines approach EJ research from slightly different perspectives, but all offer unique and valuable insight to the EJ knowledge domain. Although the interdisciplinary nature of environmental justice should be viewed as a strength, it presents a challenge when attempting to both summarize and synthesize key contributions to the field, due to disciplinary bias, narrow subfield foci, or gaps in knowledge by a research team without a representative disciplinary composition. The purpose of this paper is to provide a succinct, panoptic review of key research contributions to environmental justice, while simultaneously minimizing common problems associated with traditional reviews. In particular, this paper explores the utility of co-citation network analysis, to provide insight into the most important subdomains of environmental justice research. The results suggest that while early EJ research is initially focused on environmental disamenities and a continued focus on race and inequality, the research gradually shifts to foci more concerned with environmental amenities, such as parks and greenspace. We also find that race and inequality remain an important and consist line of research over the duration of the study time period. Implications for environmental justice research and its allied subfields are discussed.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/4/1022environmental justiceenvironmental injusticecitation analysisco-citation network |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jake R. Nelson Tony H. Grubesic |
spellingShingle |
Jake R. Nelson Tony H. Grubesic Environmental Justice: A Panoptic Overview Using Scientometrics Sustainability environmental justice environmental injustice citation analysis co-citation network |
author_facet |
Jake R. Nelson Tony H. Grubesic |
author_sort |
Jake R. Nelson |
title |
Environmental Justice: A Panoptic Overview Using Scientometrics |
title_short |
Environmental Justice: A Panoptic Overview Using Scientometrics |
title_full |
Environmental Justice: A Panoptic Overview Using Scientometrics |
title_fullStr |
Environmental Justice: A Panoptic Overview Using Scientometrics |
title_full_unstemmed |
Environmental Justice: A Panoptic Overview Using Scientometrics |
title_sort |
environmental justice: a panoptic overview using scientometrics |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Sustainability |
issn |
2071-1050 |
publishDate |
2018-03-01 |
description |
Since its initial introduction in the 1970s, the field of environmental justice (EJ) continues to grow, with significant contributions from the disciplines of sustainability science, geography, political science, public policy and administration, urban planning, law, and many others. Each of these disciplines approach EJ research from slightly different perspectives, but all offer unique and valuable insight to the EJ knowledge domain. Although the interdisciplinary nature of environmental justice should be viewed as a strength, it presents a challenge when attempting to both summarize and synthesize key contributions to the field, due to disciplinary bias, narrow subfield foci, or gaps in knowledge by a research team without a representative disciplinary composition. The purpose of this paper is to provide a succinct, panoptic review of key research contributions to environmental justice, while simultaneously minimizing common problems associated with traditional reviews. In particular, this paper explores the utility of co-citation network analysis, to provide insight into the most important subdomains of environmental justice research. The results suggest that while early EJ research is initially focused on environmental disamenities and a continued focus on race and inequality, the research gradually shifts to foci more concerned with environmental amenities, such as parks and greenspace. We also find that race and inequality remain an important and consist line of research over the duration of the study time period. Implications for environmental justice research and its allied subfields are discussed. |
topic |
environmental justice environmental injustice citation analysis co-citation network |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/4/1022 |
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AT jakernelson environmentaljusticeapanopticoverviewusingscientometrics AT tonyhgrubesic environmentaljusticeapanopticoverviewusingscientometrics |
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