Eliminating environmental health and racial disparities will make us a much stronger nation as a whole. Mounting evidence reveals that race and place matter and both impact health. As we as a nation grow smarter , greener, and more sustainable, we also need to grow healthier and more just to address longstanding disparities and inequalities that result from social determinants of health.
In our new book, Environmental Health and Racial Equity in the United States: Building Environmentally Just, Sustainable and Livable Communities , published in April by the American Public Health Association Press (APHA),my colleagues and I offer a "20-point plan" for addressing environmental health disparities--a problem that disproportionately impacts low-income families and people of color. The strategies emerged from a review and synthesis of three decades of research, practice and public policy. They are offered in an effort to build, support and strengthen the work around environmental justice, health and racial equity into the future.
Strategy 1: Support efforts of the larger Environmental Justice Movement and its member organizations to "re-invent" themselves, refine their message, and articulate a proactive vision.
Strategy 2: Assist organizations build economically vibrant and socially just communities with emphasis on health and well-being of families and children.
Strategy 3: Support programs and strategies that strengthen the capacity of organizations to analyze and solve place-focused problems at the national, regional, statewide, and local community level.
Strategy 4: Foster strong collaborations, alliances, and multigenerational networking.
Strategy 5: Support youth and student work that intersects with a broad range of organizing areas across the broader environmental, health, and racial equity fields.
Strategy 6: Invest in work that intersects environmental health and reproductive health.
Strategy 7: Invest in long-term campaigns and programming.
Strategy 8: Broaden the base of foundations and government funding of environmental justice and health equity work that extends beyond funding "silos."
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