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Blacks Just don't care : unmasking popular sterotypes about concern for the environment among African-Americans

By: JONES, Robert Emmet.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: New York : Marcel Dekker, 2002International Journal of Public Administration- IJPA 25, 2-3, p. 221-251Abstract: The paper examines how blacks and other less powerful groups have been unfairly portrayed and represented within the public policy debate on environmental issues. The common assumption that blacks are rather shallow in their concerce for the environment is one example of this bias. Its validity is assessed under the conditions of the economic contitngency hypothesis, which specifies that this apparent lack of concern byu blacks should be most evident during periods of economic decline. Previous studies and analyses conducted on NORC General Social Survey trend data do not lend support to this claim. Suggestions are provided to better indentify, articulate, and incorporate the views of people of color in environmental policy and its administration
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The paper examines how blacks and other less powerful groups have been unfairly portrayed and represented within the public policy debate on environmental issues. The common assumption that blacks are rather shallow in their concerce for the environment is one example of this bias. Its validity is assessed under the conditions of the economic contitngency hypothesis, which specifies that this apparent lack of concern byu blacks should be most evident during periods of economic decline. Previous studies and analyses conducted on NORC General Social Survey trend data do not lend support to this claim. Suggestions are provided to better indentify, articulate, and incorporate the views of people of color in environmental policy and its administration

Volume 25

Numbers 2-3

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