TY - JOUR
T1 - Environmental Justice Organizing in a Gentrifying Community: Navigating Dilemmas of Representation, Issue Selection, and Recruitment
AU - Krings, Amy
AU - Copic, Colette
N1 - Krings, A., & Copic, C. (2021). Environmental Justice Organizing in a Gentrifying Community: Navigating Dilemmas of Representation, Issue Selection, and Recruitment. Families in Society, 102(2), 154-166.
PY - 2020/11/24
Y1 - 2020/11/24
N2 - Environmental justice organizations aim to secure an equitable distribution of environmental resources through the participation and self-determination of affected people, particularly communities of color. Yet organizing in a market economy is complicated: As communities become greener, gentrification can follow, thereby inadvertently displacing low-income communities of color and reproducing environmental injustices. This study informs antiracist community practice methods by examining strategic and ethical dilemmas embedded within an environmental justice organization that is located in a gentrifying Mexican American neighborhood in Chicago. Drawing from interviews, we examine members’ perceptions relating to representation, recruitment, and issue selection. We reveal key considerations for community organizations and residents as they work to promote environmental equity without contributing to the marginalization or displacement of communities of color.
AB - Environmental justice organizations aim to secure an equitable distribution of environmental resources through the participation and self-determination of affected people, particularly communities of color. Yet organizing in a market economy is complicated: As communities become greener, gentrification can follow, thereby inadvertently displacing low-income communities of color and reproducing environmental injustices. This study informs antiracist community practice methods by examining strategic and ethical dilemmas embedded within an environmental justice organization that is located in a gentrifying Mexican American neighborhood in Chicago. Drawing from interviews, we examine members’ perceptions relating to representation, recruitment, and issue selection. We reveal key considerations for community organizations and residents as they work to promote environmental equity without contributing to the marginalization or displacement of communities of color.
KW - community practice
KW - community development
KW - community organizing
KW - environmental gentrification
KW - gentrified organization
KW - public participation
UR - https://ecommons.luc.edu/socialwork_facpubs/121
U2 - 10.1177/1044389420952247
DO - 10.1177/1044389420952247
M3 - Article
JO - Social Work: School of Social Work Faculty Publications and Other Works
JF - Social Work: School of Social Work Faculty Publications and Other Works
ER -