Dear All,

Apologies for cross-posting. Please find below a call for abstracts for a 
special issue of the Journal of Rural Studies exploring rurality and 
environmental injustice. Please feel free to email Kate MacTavish or myself 
with any questions. 

Call for Abstracts: “Rural as a Dimension of Environmental Injustice”

 

Paper Abstracts Due: October 1st

Papers Invited for Submission to Journal of Rural Studies Due: March 1st  

Submission: Email abstracts (up to 350-words) to Loka Ashwood 
([email protected]) and Kate MacTavish ([email protected]). 

Changing community and production dynamics make rural places a state-sanctioned 
site for some of the most hazardous and toxic industries of our time. From its 
production treadmill, industrial agriculture has cast onto rural areas a 
plethora of negative externalities: mounting levels of air and water pollution, 
farm consolidation, and depopulation. A range of extractive and other risky 
industries justify the siting of facilities in rural areas because of easy 
access to ample natural resources, sparse populations that reduce exposure 
risk, and the possibility of economic revitalization. State and federal 
statutes in the U.S. context (e.g., Right To Farm laws, the Federal Code of 
Regulations for Nuclear Operations) often permit these industries to target 
rural America based on past practice and low population levels.

Cities serve as powerful hubs for the global economy, pulling away resources 
from less prominent urban and rural areas. The growing periphery within core 
countries, as well as continued resource extraction of rural places abroad, 
calls for increased attention to the rural facets of injustice in developed and 
developing countries.  

We invite paper submissions that explore facets of the rural that help explain 
rural places’ vulnerability to environmental injustices from interdisciplinary 
perspectives, including (but not limited to) sociology, geography, law, 
anthropology, public health, and the environmental sciences. We are especially 
keen to receive papers from scholars working broadly on issues of environmental 
justice in order to foster conversation between those scholars and scholars 
whose focus on the rural more generally. We ask that abstracts state the 
purpose of the research, the results, major conclusions, and policy implications

Abstracts of interest will be reviewed and then select papers will be invited 
for full paper submission on March 1, 2015. Accepted papers will be published 
in a special issue of the Journal of Rural Studies.


Loka Ashwood
PhD Candidate
Department of Community and Environmental Sociology 
University of Wisconsin-Madison

Reply via email to