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Environmental justice has been a central concern in a range of disciplines, and both the concept and its coverage have expanded substantially in the past two decades. I examine this development in three key ways. First, I explore how early work on environmental justice pushed beyond many boundaries: it challenged the very notion of ‘environment’, examined the construction of injustice beyond inequity, and illustrated the potential of pluralistic conceptions of social justice. More recently, there has been a spatial expansion of the use of the term, horizontally into a broader range of issues, vertically into examinations of the global nature of environmental injustices, and conceptually to the human relationship with the non-human world. Further, I argue that recent extensions of the environmental justice frame move the discourse into a new realm – where environment and nature are understood to create the conditions for social justice.
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David Schlosberg
The University of Sydney
Environmental Politics
The University of Sydney
Australian Government
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David Schlosberg (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0e19a7358c8502d7d08cce — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/09644016.2013.755387