Description |
1 online resource (250 pages) : illustrations, tables |
Series |
Routledge Studies in Public Administration and Environmental Sustainability |
|
Routledge studies in public administration and environmental sustainability.
|
Contents |
Cover ; Half Title ; Title Page ; Copyright Page ; Dedication; Table of Contents ; List of illustrations; List of contributors ; Series foreword; Acknowledgments; Preface; Abbreviations; 1. Introduction ; Environmental justice; EJ as emergence, and agent-based modeling; The plan of the book; Notes; References; 2. Environmental justice, urban sustainability, and agent-based modeling ; Terminology; Issues in EJ research; Why do we believe that empirical-statistical EJ research is at an impasse?; An agent-based modeling approach; Discussion; Notes; References |
|
3. An agent-based model for environmental justice: The EJ ABM EJ ABM in NetLogo; Model outcome; EJ ABM interface; Discussion; Notes; References; 4. Economic rationality, political rationality, or racial targeting: Focusing on firm behavior ; Theories of firm siting in EJ research ; Modeling firms' and residents' decisions; Economics, politics, discrimination, and race consciousness; Discussion; Notes; References; 5. Residential choice constraints ; What can cause minority-correlated environmental disparities?; The role of residential constraints in EJ outcomes; Discussion; Notes; References |
|
6. Race, class, and environmental disparities The ""race versus class" debate ; Considering income class of residents; Race, income, similarity preferences, and their dynamics; Discussion; Notes; References; 7. Residential mobility ; Settlement patterns; Residential mobility; Modeling residential mobility; Impact of residential mobility on EJ outcomes; Discussion; Notes; References; 8. Local zoning ; Why local zoning in EJ research?; Introducing local zoning scenarios; The effect of zoning to internalize negative externalities of noxious facilities; Discussion; Notes; References |
|
9. Polluted-site remediation Hazardous site remediation; Modeling hazardous-site remediation plans; Which alternative reduces the EJ problem more effectively?; Discussion; Notes; References; 10. All politics is spatial: : Integrating an agent-based model with spatially explicit landscape data ; Integrating agent-based modeling with GIS; A case of a GIS-enhanced ABM for decision support; Discussion; Notes; References; 11. Conclusions ; What we learned; Limitations of the agent-based modeling approach; Summary; Notes; References; Appendix: NetLogo code for EJ ABM 1.0 ; References; Index |
Summary |
As the study of environmental policy and justice becomes increasingly significant in today's global climate, standard statistical approaches to gathering data have become less helpful at generating new insights and possibilities. None of the conventional frameworks easily allow for the empirical modeling of the interactions of all the actors involved, or for the emergence of outcomes unintended by the actors. The existing frameworks account for the ""what, "" but not for the ""why.""Heather E. Campbell, Yushim Kim, and Adam Eckerd bring an innovative perspective to environmental justice researc |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Print version record |
Subject |
Environmental justice -- Mathematical models
|
|
Urban ecology (Sociology) -- Mathematical models
|
|
Sustainable development -- Mathematical models
|
|
Sustainable development -- Mathematical models
|
Form |
Electronic book
|
Author |
Kim, Yushim, author
|
|
Eckerd, Adam, author
|
ISBN |
9780203076941 |
|
020307694X |
|
9781135128500 |
|
1135128502 |
|
9781135128456 |
|
1135128456 |
|
9781135128494 |
|
1135128499 |
|
9781138066694 |
|
1138066699 |
|