COVID-19 as Eco-Pandemic Injustice: Opportunities for Collective and Antiracist Approaches to Environmental Health

Author:

Powers Martha1ORCID,Brown Phil1,Poudrier Grace1,Ohayon Jennifer Liss2,Cordner Alissa3,Alder Cole1,Atlas Marina Goreau1

Affiliation:

1. Northeastern University, Boston, MA, USA

2. Silent Spring Institute, Newton, MA, USA

3. Whitman College, Walla Walla, WA, USA

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has coincided with a powerful upsurge in antiracist activism in the United States, linking many forms and consequences of racism to public and environmental health. This commentary develops the concept of eco-pandemic injustice to explain interrelationships between the pandemic and socioecological systems, demonstrating how COVID-19 both reveals and deepens structural inequalities that form along lines of environmental health. Using Pellow’s critical environmental justice theory, we examine how the crisis has made more visible and exacerbated links between racism, poverty, and health while providing opportunities to enact change through collective embodied health movements. We describe new collaborations and the potential for meaningful opportunities at the intersections between health, antiracist, environmental, and political movements that are advocating for the types of transformational change described by critical environmental justice.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Social Psychology

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