Anderson, A. B. , Anderton, D. L., & Oakes, J. M. (1994, July). Evaluating TSDF siting over the past two decades. Waste Age, 83-100.
2.
Anderton, D. L. (1996). Methodological issues in the spatiotemporal analysis of environ mental equity. Social Science Quarterly, 77(3), 508-515.
3.
Anderton, D. L. , Anderson, A. B., Oakes, J. M., & Fraser, M. R. (1994). Environmental equity: The demographics of dumping. Demography, 31(2), 228-248.
4.
Anderton, D. L. , Oakes, J. M., & Egan, K. L. (1997). Demographics of the discovery and prioritization of abandoned toxic sites. Evaluation Review, 21(1), 3-26.
5.
Asch, P. , & Seneca, J. J. (1978). Some evidence on the distribution of air quality. Land Economics, 54(3), 278-297.
6.
Been, V. (1994). Locally undesirable land uses in minority neighborhoods: Disproportionate siting or market dynamics?The Yale Law Journal, 103, 1383-1422.
7.
Been, V. (1995). Analyzing evidence of environmental justice. Journal of Land Use and Environmental Law, 11, 1-36.
8.
Bishop, R. V. (1979). The construction and use of causality tests. Agricultural Economics Research, 31, 1-6.
9.
Bowen, W. M. , Salling, M. J., Haynes, K. E., & Cyran, E. J. (1995). Toward environmental justice: Spatial equity in Ohio and Cleveland. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 85(4), 641-663.
10.
Brown, P. (1995). Race, class, and environmental health: A review and systematization of the literature. Environmental Research, 69, 15-30.
11.
Bullard, R. D. (1983). Solid waste sites and the Black Houston community. Sociological Inquiry, 53, 273-288.
12.
Burke, L. (1993, October). Race and environmental equity: A geographic analysis in Los Angeles. Geographical Information Systems, 44-50.
13.
Calderon, R. L. , Johnson, C. C., Jr., Craun, G. F., Dufour, A. P., Karlin, R. J., Sinks, T., & Valentine, J. L. (1993). Health risks from contaminated water: Do class and race matter?Toxicology and Industrial Health, 9(5), 879-900.
14.
Campbell, D. T. , & Stanley, J. C. (1963). Experimental and quasi-experimental designs for research. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
15.
Cutter, S. L. , & Solecki, W. D. (1996). Setting environmental justice in space and place: Acute and chronic airborne toxic releases in the southeastern United States. Urban Geography, 17(5), 380-399.
16.
Earickson, R. J. , & Billick, I. H. (1988). The A real Association of Urban Air Pollutants and Residential Characteristics: Louisville and Detroit. Applied Geography, 8, 5-23.
17.
Fisher, M. (1995). Environmental racism claims brought under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act. Environmental Law, 25, 285-334.
18.
Foreman, C. H., Jr. (1998). The promise and peril of environmental justice. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution.
19.
Freeman, M. (1972). Distribution of environmental quality. In A. V. Kneese & B. T. Bower (Eds.), Environmental quality analysis: Theory and methods (pp. 243-278). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins.
20.
Glickman, T. S. (1994, Summer). Measuring environmental equity with geographical information systems. Resources, 2-6.
21.
Gupta, S. , Van Houtven, G., & Cropper, M. L. (1995). Do benefits and costs matter in environ mental regulation? An analysis of EPA decisions under Superfund. In R. L. Revesz & R. B. Stewart (Eds.), Analyzing Superfund: Economics, science and law (pp. 83-111). Washington DC: Resources for the Future.
22.
Hayek, F. (1945). The use of knowledge in society. The American Economic Review, 35(4), 519-530.
23.
Heitgerd, J. L. , Burg, J. R., & Strictland, H. G. (1995). A geographic information systems approach to estimating and assessing National Priorities List site demographics: Racial and Hispanic origin composition. International Journal of Occupational Medicine and Toxicology, 4(3), 343-363.
24.
Hird, J. A. (1993). Environmental policy and equity: The case of Superfund. Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 12(2), 323-343.
25.
Hodges, J. S. , & Dewer, J. A. (1992). Is it you or your model talking? A framework for model validation. Santa Monica, CA: RAND.
26.
Kriesel, W. , Centner, T. J., & Keeler, A. G. (1996). Neighborhood exposure to toxic releases: Are there racial inequities?Growth and Change, 27, 479-499.
27.
Lester, J. P. , Allen, D. W., & Milburn-Lauer, D. A. (1994, April 14-16). Race, class and environmental quality: An examination of environmental racism in the American states. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago.
28.
Merton, R. K. (1959). Notes on problem finding in sociology. In R. K. Merton, L. Broom, &. L. S. Cottrell, Jr. (Eds.), Sociology today (pp. ix-xxxiv). New York: Basic Books.
29.
Mohai, P. , & Bryant, B. (1992). Environmental racism: Reviewing the evidence. In B. Bryant & P. Mohai (Eds.), Race and the incidence of environmental hazards (pp. 163-176). Boulder, CO: Westview.
30.
National Research Council . (1983). Risk assessment in the federal government: Managing the process. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.
31.
Neumann, C. M. , Forman, D. L., & Rothlein, J. E. (1998). Hazard screening of chemical releases and environmental equity analysis of populations proximate to toxic release inventory facilities in Oregon. Environmental Health Perspectives, 106(4), 217-226.
32.
Nieves, L. A. , & Nieves, A. L. (1992, November 15). Regional differences in the potential exposure of U.S. minority populations to hazardous waste facilities. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Regional Science Association, Chicago.
33.
Odland, J. (1988). Spatial autocorrelation. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
34.
Sadd, J. L. , Pastor, M., Jr., Boer, J. T., & Snyder, L. D. (1999). “Every breath you take... ”: The demographics of toxic air releases in southern California. Economic Development Quarterly, 13(2), 107-123.
35.
Stretesky, P. , & Hogan, M. J. (1998). Environmental justice: An analysis of Superfund sites in Florida. Social Problems, 45(2), 268-283.
36.
Tomboulian, A. , Tomboulian, P., Metzger, P., Towns, D., & Hands, L. (1995). Tri-county Detroit area environmental equity study. Detroit, MI: United Way Community Services.
37.
United Church of Christ . (1987). Toxic wastes and race in the United States: A national report on the racial and socioeconomic characteristics with hazardous waste sites. New York: United Church of Christ, Commission for Racial Justice.
38.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency . (1992). Environmental equity: Reducing risks for all communities (Policy, Planning and Evaluation Report No. PM-221). Washington, DC: Author.
39.
U.S. General Accounting Office . (1995). Hazardous and nonhazardous waste: Demographics of people living near waste facilities (Report No. RCED-95-84). Washington, DC: Author.
40.
Yandle, T. , & Burton, D. (1996). Historical hazardous waste landfill siting in Texas. Social Science Quarterly, 77(3), 477-492.
41.
Zimmerman, R. (1993). Social equity and environmental risk. Risk Analysis, 13(6), 649-666.