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The Rise of the U.S. Environmental Health Movement

Kate Davies - Foreword by Elise Miller

This book, named one of Booklist's Top 10 books on sustainability in 2014, is the first to offer a comprehensive examination of the environmental health movement, which unlike many parts of the environmental movement, focuses on ways toxic chemicals and other hazardous agents in the environment effect human health and well-being. Born in 1978 when Lois Gibbs organized her neighbors to protest the health effects of a toxic waste dump in Love Canal, New York, the movement has spread across the United States and throughout the world. By placing human health at the center of its environmental argument, this movement has achieved many victories in community mobilization and legislative reform. In The Rise of the U.S. Environmental Health Movement, environmental health expert Kate Davies describes the movement’s historical, ideological, and cultural roots and analyzes its strategies and successes.




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  • Reviews
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Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 280 • Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-1-4422-2137-6 • Hardback • March 2013 • $63.00 • (£48.00)
978-1-4422-2245-8 • Paperback • April 2015 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-4422-2138-3 • eBook • March 2013 • $36.00 • (£30.00)
Subjects: Science / Environmental Science, Science / Life Sciences / Biology / General, Science / Philosophy & Social Aspects
Kate Davies has worked on environmental health and justice issues for thirty-five years in the United States and Canada. She has worked for numerous nongovernmental and governmental organizations including Greenpeace, the Canadian Environmental Health Organization, and the Sustainable Path Foundation. She is currently on the core faculty at Antioch College’s Center for Creative Change.





Acknowledgments


Introduction
Environmental Health
The US Environmental Health Movement
Background
This Book


Part 1: Historical and Cultural Roots
Chapter 1: The European Ancestry of Environmental Health
The Philosophy of Ancient Greece
The Engineering Achievements of Rome
The Spread of Judeo-Christian Religions
The Scientific Revolution and the Nature of Science
Social Justice and the Enlightenment
The Environmental Health Consequences of the Industrial Revolution
New Policies and Legislation
Recognizing and Preventing Environmentally-Related Diseases

Chapter 2: Early Environmental Public Health
The Environmental Health Consequences of the American Industrial Revolution
Environmental Public Health Concerns
Occupational Health: Working with the Urban Poor
The Home as an Environment for Protecting Health
The Progressive Era and Environmental Conservation
The Origins of Urban Planning
Preventing Environmentally-Transmitted Diseases


Chapter 3: Environmentalism and Economic Growth
Post World War II Economic Growth and the Creation of a Consumer Society
The Environmental Health Effects of Air Pollution
The Environmental Health Effects of Water Pollution
The Environmental Health Effects of Food Quality
The Antinuclear Movement and the Precedents It Set
New Ideas: Toxic Chemicals
New Ideas: Deep Ecology and Social Ecology
New Ideas: Population Growth and Resource Depletion
The Rise of Environmentalism
EPA and the Final Separation of Environmental and Public Health
The Relationship Between the Environmental Movement and the Labor Movement
The
Toxic Substances Control Act and Other Environmental Legislation of the 1970s


Chapter 4: The Birth of the US Environmental Health Movement
Love Canal and Its Aftermath
The Beginnings of the Environmental Justice Movement
The Role of Disasters in Building the Environmental Health Movement
Struggles for Regional Environmental Health in the Great Lakes
Winning the Battle Against Waste Incineration
Opposition to Pesticides: An Ongoing Struggle
Securing the Right to Know
Toxics Use Reduction and Pollution Prevention: Limited Success
The Lead Saga
Newer Challenges: Endocrine Disruptors and Epigenetics


Part II: The Contemporary Movement
Chapter 5: Organizations and Issues
The Movement’s Strongest Asset: State and Local Groups
The Roles of National Groups
The Influence of European Toxics Policy
The Louisville Charter
The Emergence of National Coalitions
Communications and Getting the Word Out
The Importance of Women’s Organizations
Alliances with Labor Organizations
New Ways of Framing Environmental Health: Judeo-Christian Religions
Beyond Toxics: Nanotechnology
Beyond Toxics: Electromagnetic Fields
Beyond Toxics: Fossil Fuels
Beyond Toxics: Urban Planning and Green Building
The Significance of Foundation Funding

Chapter 6: Making Environmental Issues Personal
Gaining Support from People Affected by Environmentally-Related Disease
Working with Caregivers - Nurses
Working with Caregivers – Physicians
Engaging the Health Care Sector
Protecting Children’s Environmental Health
Food, Glorious Food
Opposing Toxics in Consumer Products
And in Personal Care Products
Pollution in People

Chapter 7: Precaution and the Limitations of Science
The Impossibility of Proving Environmental Causation
The Failure to Consider Ethics
The Distortion and Cover-up of Scientific Information
Problems with Risk Assessment
Overview of Precaution
The Ingredients of Precaution
Progress on Precaution

Chapter 8: Environmental Justice and the Right to a Healthy Environment
Perspectives on Environmental Justice
Constitutional and Legal Rights to a Healthy Environment
Scientific Information on Environmental Health Injustice in the US
Environmental Justice Issues
Community-Based Research
Environmental Justice Strategies
The US Environmental Justice and Environmental Health Movements


Chapter 9: Changing Economics, the Markets and Business
The Cost of Environmental Illness
Market Campaigns: Overview
Market Campaigns: PVC Products and Packaging
Market Campaigns: Electronics
Market Campaigns: The Health Sector
Green Chemistry and Safer Materials
Socially Responsible Investing
Partnerships with Business

Conclusion and Next Steps: Strategies for Social Change
Strategies for Social Change
Creating Inspiring Visions
Minding the Gap between our Collective Aspirations and Reality
Seeing the Forest and the Trees
Identifying Leverage Points for Environmental Health
Organizing More, Collective Action
Telling Environmental Health Stories
Self-Care
Final Reflections


A Chronology of Key Events in US Environmental Health


Selected Resources on Environmental Health



The Rise of the US Environmental Health Movement is an ambitious book in the best sense of the word. Davies seeks to synthesize a tremendous amount of information, and to begin to write history as it is happening. She has made an invaluable contribution to all those who care—or should care—about what environmental contaminants are doing to us and to all life on earth.
— Michael Lerner, president of Commonweal and co-founder of the Collaborative on Health and the Environment, Health Care Without Harm and the Health and Environmental Funders Network


The Rise of the U.S. Environmental Health Movement is a finely-balanced and fair-minded account of how this movement came to be and what it will take to execute the sea change we need to fully protect public health.
— Elise Miller, Director and co-founder of the Collaborative on Health and the Environment, founded and directed the Institute for Children’s Environmental Health, Founding Executive Director of the Jenifer Altman Foundation


Kate Davies' authoritative history describes the origins and dimensions of one wing of the environmental movement. It is both generous and accurate in its portrayal of the ideas, the people, and organizations that forged the link between the environment and human health. This is the definitive guide to the story of one of the most important movements of our century.
— Carolyn Raffensperger, Science and Environmental Health Network


A compelling history and an accessible guide that unravels the complexity of environmental health issues and the evolving environmental health movement and offers references and examples for how our collective and individual actions can make a healthy difference in the places where we live, work, play, and go to school.
— Peggy M. Shepard, Executive Director and co-founder of WE ACT for Environmental Justice


The Rise of the U.S. Environmental Health Movement is a well-done history of America’s environmental health movement and offers readers valuable information on how grassroots organizing prevents harm from toxic exposures and leads to safe and healthy communities.
— Lois Marie Gibbs, Executive Director, Center for Health, Environment & Justice


The world is not a safe place. Toxic waste, air pollution, and pesticide use can be hazardous to your health. According to the World Health Organization, more than 40 percent of all asthma, nearly 20 percent of all cancers, and 5-percent of all birth defects are attributable to poor environmental quality. It’s impossible to avoid exposure to at least some of the 80,000 different chemicals utilized in the United States. The environmental health movement consists of many individuals and organizations cognizant of the relationship between people and the environment and environmental factors that potentially affect health. Davies extensively covers the historical roots and rise of this movement in the United States and tracks its current status and strategies, from forging national coalitions to lobbying for legislation and promoting grassroots activism. America’s environmental health movement focuses on environmental safety through precaution and prevention, opposes the use of toxic chemicals, and advocates sustainability and environmental justice. As ecotheologian Thomas Berry once declared, 'You cannot have well humans on a sick planet.'
— Booklist


The Rise of the U.S. Environmental Health Movement examines the evolution of the diverse social movement that aims to prevent such hazards from arising. Between the complexity of our chemical environment, policy responses to it, and the movement itself, the task that Davies has taken on strains the limits of a single volume. Her broad narrative succeeds. . . . Davies’s book offers a valuable introduction to key topics in environmental health politics. Advanced undergraduates, beginning graduate students, and budding activists interested in environmental health may find the later chapters especially helpful for gaining conversance in the movement’s positions, rhetoric, and controversies. Faculty teaching courses on environmental health or health geography may find the book a helpful guide to key policies, debates, and events, especially if they are struggling to present complex scientific and political concepts for undergraduates. Davies’s great skill is in distilling these concepts.
— Journal of Historical Geography


Kate Davies of Antioch University in Seattle has written a pioneering work that fills a gap in the literature and advances the cause of environmental health: that is, increasing human health and well-being through changing the environment. . . .The Rise of the U.S. Environmental Health Movement is a new departure and a major achievement. It will appeal to a wide audience of potential activists because of its optimistic tone and its appeal to spiritual as well as material values. The contributions it makes are diverse and discerning while the controversies it generates are pertinent and constructive.
— New Solutions: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy


The book is well-written and easy to read. . .[I]t is interesting. . . .[T]his work will appeal . . . to those interested primarily in the process of social change itself. . . .[A] copy would make a welcome addition to a complete medical, public health or sociology library. . . .Its greatest value to the occupational and environmental medicine provider lies in its ability to teach one about the importance of making environmental health issues personal and economically relevant, to achieve sufficient public momentum. In this way, individuals can succeed in making legislative and regulatory changes that improve the health and safety of our communities at the local, national, and global levels.
— Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine


• Winner, Booklist Spotlight on Sustainability: Top 10 Books on Sustainability (2014)

The Rise of the U.S. Environmental Health Movement

Cover Image
Hardback
Paperback
eBook
Summary
Summary
  • This book, named one of Booklist's Top 10 books on sustainability in 2014, is the first to offer a comprehensive examination of the environmental health movement, which unlike many parts of the environmental movement, focuses on ways toxic chemicals and other hazardous agents in the environment effect human health and well-being. Born in 1978 when Lois Gibbs organized her neighbors to protest the health effects of a toxic waste dump in Love Canal, New York, the movement has spread across the United States and throughout the world. By placing human health at the center of its environmental argument, this movement has achieved many victories in community mobilization and legislative reform. In The Rise of the U.S. Environmental Health Movement, environmental health expert Kate Davies describes the movement’s historical, ideological, and cultural roots and analyzes its strategies and successes.




Details
Details
  • Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
    Pages: 280 • Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
    978-1-4422-2137-6 • Hardback • March 2013 • $63.00 • (£48.00)
    978-1-4422-2245-8 • Paperback • April 2015 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
    978-1-4422-2138-3 • eBook • March 2013 • $36.00 • (£30.00)
    Subjects: Science / Environmental Science, Science / Life Sciences / Biology / General, Science / Philosophy & Social Aspects
Author
Author
  • Kate Davies has worked on environmental health and justice issues for thirty-five years in the United States and Canada. She has worked for numerous nongovernmental and governmental organizations including Greenpeace, the Canadian Environmental Health Organization, and the Sustainable Path Foundation. She is currently on the core faculty at Antioch College’s Center for Creative Change.





Table of Contents
Table of Contents
  • Acknowledgments


    Introduction
    Environmental Health
    The US Environmental Health Movement
    Background
    This Book


    Part 1: Historical and Cultural Roots
    Chapter 1: The European Ancestry of Environmental Health
    The Philosophy of Ancient Greece
    The Engineering Achievements of Rome
    The Spread of Judeo-Christian Religions
    The Scientific Revolution and the Nature of Science
    Social Justice and the Enlightenment
    The Environmental Health Consequences of the Industrial Revolution
    New Policies and Legislation
    Recognizing and Preventing Environmentally-Related Diseases

    Chapter 2: Early Environmental Public Health
    The Environmental Health Consequences of the American Industrial Revolution
    Environmental Public Health Concerns
    Occupational Health: Working with the Urban Poor
    The Home as an Environment for Protecting Health
    The Progressive Era and Environmental Conservation
    The Origins of Urban Planning
    Preventing Environmentally-Transmitted Diseases


    Chapter 3: Environmentalism and Economic Growth
    Post World War II Economic Growth and the Creation of a Consumer Society
    The Environmental Health Effects of Air Pollution
    The Environmental Health Effects of Water Pollution
    The Environmental Health Effects of Food Quality
    The Antinuclear Movement and the Precedents It Set
    New Ideas: Toxic Chemicals
    New Ideas: Deep Ecology and Social Ecology
    New Ideas: Population Growth and Resource Depletion
    The Rise of Environmentalism
    EPA and the Final Separation of Environmental and Public Health
    The Relationship Between the Environmental Movement and the Labor Movement
    The
    Toxic Substances Control Act and Other Environmental Legislation of the 1970s


    Chapter 4: The Birth of the US Environmental Health Movement
    Love Canal and Its Aftermath
    The Beginnings of the Environmental Justice Movement
    The Role of Disasters in Building the Environmental Health Movement
    Struggles for Regional Environmental Health in the Great Lakes
    Winning the Battle Against Waste Incineration
    Opposition to Pesticides: An Ongoing Struggle
    Securing the Right to Know
    Toxics Use Reduction and Pollution Prevention: Limited Success
    The Lead Saga
    Newer Challenges: Endocrine Disruptors and Epigenetics


    Part II: The Contemporary Movement
    Chapter 5: Organizations and Issues
    The Movement’s Strongest Asset: State and Local Groups
    The Roles of National Groups
    The Influence of European Toxics Policy
    The Louisville Charter
    The Emergence of National Coalitions
    Communications and Getting the Word Out
    The Importance of Women’s Organizations
    Alliances with Labor Organizations
    New Ways of Framing Environmental Health: Judeo-Christian Religions
    Beyond Toxics: Nanotechnology
    Beyond Toxics: Electromagnetic Fields
    Beyond Toxics: Fossil Fuels
    Beyond Toxics: Urban Planning and Green Building
    The Significance of Foundation Funding

    Chapter 6: Making Environmental Issues Personal
    Gaining Support from People Affected by Environmentally-Related Disease
    Working with Caregivers - Nurses
    Working with Caregivers – Physicians
    Engaging the Health Care Sector
    Protecting Children’s Environmental Health
    Food, Glorious Food
    Opposing Toxics in Consumer Products
    And in Personal Care Products
    Pollution in People

    Chapter 7: Precaution and the Limitations of Science
    The Impossibility of Proving Environmental Causation
    The Failure to Consider Ethics
    The Distortion and Cover-up of Scientific Information
    Problems with Risk Assessment
    Overview of Precaution
    The Ingredients of Precaution
    Progress on Precaution

    Chapter 8: Environmental Justice and the Right to a Healthy Environment
    Perspectives on Environmental Justice
    Constitutional and Legal Rights to a Healthy Environment
    Scientific Information on Environmental Health Injustice in the US
    Environmental Justice Issues
    Community-Based Research
    Environmental Justice Strategies
    The US Environmental Justice and Environmental Health Movements


    Chapter 9: Changing Economics, the Markets and Business
    The Cost of Environmental Illness
    Market Campaigns: Overview
    Market Campaigns: PVC Products and Packaging
    Market Campaigns: Electronics
    Market Campaigns: The Health Sector
    Green Chemistry and Safer Materials
    Socially Responsible Investing
    Partnerships with Business

    Conclusion and Next Steps: Strategies for Social Change
    Strategies for Social Change
    Creating Inspiring Visions
    Minding the Gap between our Collective Aspirations and Reality
    Seeing the Forest and the Trees
    Identifying Leverage Points for Environmental Health
    Organizing More, Collective Action
    Telling Environmental Health Stories
    Self-Care
    Final Reflections


    A Chronology of Key Events in US Environmental Health


    Selected Resources on Environmental Health



Reviews
Reviews
  • The Rise of the US Environmental Health Movement is an ambitious book in the best sense of the word. Davies seeks to synthesize a tremendous amount of information, and to begin to write history as it is happening. She has made an invaluable contribution to all those who care—or should care—about what environmental contaminants are doing to us and to all life on earth.
    — Michael Lerner, president of Commonweal and co-founder of the Collaborative on Health and the Environment, Health Care Without Harm and the Health and Environmental Funders Network


    The Rise of the U.S. Environmental Health Movement is a finely-balanced and fair-minded account of how this movement came to be and what it will take to execute the sea change we need to fully protect public health.
    — Elise Miller, Director and co-founder of the Collaborative on Health and the Environment, founded and directed the Institute for Children’s Environmental Health, Founding Executive Director of the Jenifer Altman Foundation


    Kate Davies' authoritative history describes the origins and dimensions of one wing of the environmental movement. It is both generous and accurate in its portrayal of the ideas, the people, and organizations that forged the link between the environment and human health. This is the definitive guide to the story of one of the most important movements of our century.
    — Carolyn Raffensperger, Science and Environmental Health Network


    A compelling history and an accessible guide that unravels the complexity of environmental health issues and the evolving environmental health movement and offers references and examples for how our collective and individual actions can make a healthy difference in the places where we live, work, play, and go to school.
    — Peggy M. Shepard, Executive Director and co-founder of WE ACT for Environmental Justice


    The Rise of the U.S. Environmental Health Movement is a well-done history of America’s environmental health movement and offers readers valuable information on how grassroots organizing prevents harm from toxic exposures and leads to safe and healthy communities.
    — Lois Marie Gibbs, Executive Director, Center for Health, Environment & Justice


    The world is not a safe place. Toxic waste, air pollution, and pesticide use can be hazardous to your health. According to the World Health Organization, more than 40 percent of all asthma, nearly 20 percent of all cancers, and 5-percent of all birth defects are attributable to poor environmental quality. It’s impossible to avoid exposure to at least some of the 80,000 different chemicals utilized in the United States. The environmental health movement consists of many individuals and organizations cognizant of the relationship between people and the environment and environmental factors that potentially affect health. Davies extensively covers the historical roots and rise of this movement in the United States and tracks its current status and strategies, from forging national coalitions to lobbying for legislation and promoting grassroots activism. America’s environmental health movement focuses on environmental safety through precaution and prevention, opposes the use of toxic chemicals, and advocates sustainability and environmental justice. As ecotheologian Thomas Berry once declared, 'You cannot have well humans on a sick planet.'
    — Booklist


    The Rise of the U.S. Environmental Health Movement examines the evolution of the diverse social movement that aims to prevent such hazards from arising. Between the complexity of our chemical environment, policy responses to it, and the movement itself, the task that Davies has taken on strains the limits of a single volume. Her broad narrative succeeds. . . . Davies’s book offers a valuable introduction to key topics in environmental health politics. Advanced undergraduates, beginning graduate students, and budding activists interested in environmental health may find the later chapters especially helpful for gaining conversance in the movement’s positions, rhetoric, and controversies. Faculty teaching courses on environmental health or health geography may find the book a helpful guide to key policies, debates, and events, especially if they are struggling to present complex scientific and political concepts for undergraduates. Davies’s great skill is in distilling these concepts.
    — Journal of Historical Geography


    Kate Davies of Antioch University in Seattle has written a pioneering work that fills a gap in the literature and advances the cause of environmental health: that is, increasing human health and well-being through changing the environment. . . .The Rise of the U.S. Environmental Health Movement is a new departure and a major achievement. It will appeal to a wide audience of potential activists because of its optimistic tone and its appeal to spiritual as well as material values. The contributions it makes are diverse and discerning while the controversies it generates are pertinent and constructive.
    — New Solutions: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Policy


    The book is well-written and easy to read. . .[I]t is interesting. . . .[T]his work will appeal . . . to those interested primarily in the process of social change itself. . . .[A] copy would make a welcome addition to a complete medical, public health or sociology library. . . .Its greatest value to the occupational and environmental medicine provider lies in its ability to teach one about the importance of making environmental health issues personal and economically relevant, to achieve sufficient public momentum. In this way, individuals can succeed in making legislative and regulatory changes that improve the health and safety of our communities at the local, national, and global levels.
    — Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine


Awards
Awards
  • • Winner, Booklist Spotlight on Sustainability: Top 10 Books on Sustainability (2014)

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