Literature DB >> 21834355

Down cancer alley: the lived experience of health and environmental suffering in Louisiana's chemical corridor.

Merrill Singer1.   

Abstract

With the massive Gulf oil spill of 2010, there has been intensified concern about the impacts of industrial contamination on physical environments, human health, and social well-being. Based on ethnographic research in a primarily African American town in an area of Southern Louisiana colloquially known as the Chemical Corridor because of the large number of local chemical manufacturing plants, this article engages arguments made by Auyero and Swistun concerning the uncertainties and confusions that emerge when official or empowered pronouncements about the health impacts of living near waste-generating factories conflict with the everyday experience of perceived health-related contamination in an impoverished community. The article seeks to address gaps in our understanding of how communities conceive of environmental health risk, what their sources of information and level of knowledge about this issue are, and how they handle potential conflict between access to needed employment and the local presence of industrial polluters.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21834355     DOI: 10.1111/j.1548-1387.2011.01154.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Anthropol Q        ISSN: 0745-5194


  6 in total

1.  Measuring Vapor Intrusion: From Source Science Politics to a Transdisciplinary Approach.

Authors:  Peter C Little; Kelly G Pennell
Journal:  Environ Sociol       Date:  2016-10-12

2.  Realities of environmental toxicity and their ramifications for community engagement.

Authors:  Justin T Clapp; Jody A Roberts; Britt Dahlberg; Lee Sullivan Berry; Lisa M Jacobs; Edward A Emmett; Frances K Barg
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2016-10-20       Impact factor: 4.634

3.  A systematic review and meta-analysis of haematological malignancies in residents living near petrochemical facilities.

Authors:  Calvin Jephcote; David Brown; Thomas Verbeek; Alice Mah
Journal:  Environ Health       Date:  2020-05-19       Impact factor: 5.984

4.  "Something Was Attacking Them and Their Reproductive Organs": Environmental Reproductive Justice in an Indigenous Tribe in the United States Gulf Coast.

Authors:  Jessica L Liddell; Sarah G Kington
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2021-01-14       Impact factor: 3.390

5.  Place, Race, and Case: Examining Racialized Economic Segregation and COVID-19 in Louisiana.

Authors:  Jennifer L Scott; Natasha M Lee-Johnson; Denise Danos
Journal:  J Racial Ethn Health Disparities       Date:  2022-03-03

Review 6.  Racial disparities in liver cancer: Evidence for a role of environmental contaminants and the epigenome.

Authors:  Adriana C Vidal; Cynthia A Moylan; Julius Wilder; Delores J Grant; Susan K Murphy; Cathrine Hoyo
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2022-08-22       Impact factor: 5.738

  6 in total

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