Investigating links among urban sprawl and environmental justice indicators in US territories

Sprawl often characterizes unsustainable, car-dependent, and low-density urban development at the edges of cities. Much research has documented the relationship among sprawl and air pollutant concentrations and many studies have addressed sprawl’s social implications, especially for low-income and...

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Main Author: Ioanna Tsoulou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AESOP Association of the European Schools of Planning 2018-12-01
Series:PlaNext
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.aesop-planning.eu/index.php/planext/article/view/50
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author Ioanna Tsoulou
author_facet Ioanna Tsoulou
author_sort Ioanna Tsoulou
collection DOAJ
description Sprawl often characterizes unsustainable, car-dependent, and low-density urban development at the edges of cities. Much research has documented the relationship among sprawl and air pollutant concentrations and many studies have addressed sprawl’s social implications, especially for low-income and minority groups. However, limited research has investigated the links between areas with increased levels of sprawl and air pollution, where vulnerable populations reside. This paper brings together the refined sprawl dataset from Smart Growth America and selected environmental justice indicators on air pollution-ozone and air toxics- from the US Environmental Protection Agency’s Environmental Justice Screening and Mapping Tool (EJSCREEN), in a national-level analysis of U.S. territories. Through Pearson correlations and a series of logistic regressions, the significant connection of sprawl and ozone concentrations is shown, in areas with more low-income, and less educated groups with higher percentages of children. On the other hand, while air toxics cancer risk is higher in areas with low-income, and linguistically isolated racial minorities, it has lower levels in more sprawled areas. Upon a closer look, it is shown that only selected dimensions of compactness link to higher cancer risk, while aspects such as a higher mix of jobs may have a reverse effect on it. These findings provide new directions in the ongoing discussion of sustainable urban development patterns and suggest that the focus should be on development that can promote better air quality, while simultaneously reducing social vulnerability to environmental challenges, with additional benefits for local innovation and community building.
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spelling doaj.art-17b89461c8874c7885d2a33c6a99199f2024-01-08T03:51:56ZengAESOP Association of the European Schools of PlanningPlaNext2468-06482018-12-0171Investigating links among urban sprawl and environmental justice indicators in US territoriesIoanna Tsoulou0Rutgers University Sprawl often characterizes unsustainable, car-dependent, and low-density urban development at the edges of cities. Much research has documented the relationship among sprawl and air pollutant concentrations and many studies have addressed sprawl’s social implications, especially for low-income and minority groups. However, limited research has investigated the links between areas with increased levels of sprawl and air pollution, where vulnerable populations reside. This paper brings together the refined sprawl dataset from Smart Growth America and selected environmental justice indicators on air pollution-ozone and air toxics- from the US Environmental Protection Agency’s Environmental Justice Screening and Mapping Tool (EJSCREEN), in a national-level analysis of U.S. territories. Through Pearson correlations and a series of logistic regressions, the significant connection of sprawl and ozone concentrations is shown, in areas with more low-income, and less educated groups with higher percentages of children. On the other hand, while air toxics cancer risk is higher in areas with low-income, and linguistically isolated racial minorities, it has lower levels in more sprawled areas. Upon a closer look, it is shown that only selected dimensions of compactness link to higher cancer risk, while aspects such as a higher mix of jobs may have a reverse effect on it. These findings provide new directions in the ongoing discussion of sustainable urban development patterns and suggest that the focus should be on development that can promote better air quality, while simultaneously reducing social vulnerability to environmental challenges, with additional benefits for local innovation and community building. https://journals.aesop-planning.eu/index.php/planext/article/view/50sprawlenvironmental justiceair pollutionvulnerable populationsurban form
spellingShingle Ioanna Tsoulou
Investigating links among urban sprawl and environmental justice indicators in US territories
PlaNext
sprawl
environmental justice
air pollution
vulnerable populations
urban form
title Investigating links among urban sprawl and environmental justice indicators in US territories
title_full Investigating links among urban sprawl and environmental justice indicators in US territories
title_fullStr Investigating links among urban sprawl and environmental justice indicators in US territories
title_full_unstemmed Investigating links among urban sprawl and environmental justice indicators in US territories
title_short Investigating links among urban sprawl and environmental justice indicators in US territories
title_sort investigating links among urban sprawl and environmental justice indicators in us territories
topic sprawl
environmental justice
air pollution
vulnerable populations
urban form
url https://journals.aesop-planning.eu/index.php/planext/article/view/50
work_keys_str_mv AT ioannatsoulou investigatinglinksamongurbansprawlandenvironmentaljusticeindicatorsinusterritories