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Subsidizing Democracy. By Michael G. Miller. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2013. 201p. $39.95.

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equity has indeed become a core consideration in federal decision making. More specifically, he asks, “have the EPA and other deferral agencies moved to make environmental justice a core component… Click to show full abstract

equity has indeed become a core consideration in federal decision making. More specifically, he asks, “have the EPA and other deferral agencies moved to make environmental justice a core component of their decision-making in permitting, standard setting, economic analysis, enforcement and other arenas?” (p. 5). In the 20-plus years since EO 12898, there has been a veritable explosion of academic research and policy development at the federal and state levels, but almost no serious policy assessments at the federal level. The short answer to the author’s question, therefore, is not so much. But the achievement in this volume is to come to that conclusion through serious policy analysis, which will, with time, also serve as an exemplary historical account of the contested environmental politics in relationship to race and class over the last two decades. It is easy for environmental justice social movement actors to charge federal agencies with inaction and ineffectiveness. It is much harder to document exactly how, and with that analysis to offer a possibly different road map for the future. As he writes in the introduction, the purpose of this volume is to determine “whether the policies put in place to address such violations—past, present, and future— have been effective” (p. 16). In answering such an important question, he has assembled key scholars from diverse fields (political science, law, environmental policy, criminology, and economics) who have authored key chapters that stand on their own, while retaining a coherence in the volume itself. The thematic framework that structures Failed Promises is around three approaches to justice: distributive, procedural, and corrective. The first focuses on the equitable distribution of environmental burdens and benefits, the second on procedural and decision-making processes, and the last on how lawbreaking is resolved (p. 16). While the division of tripartite approaches to justice makes analytic sense, the chapters do not clearly align with these categories. Rather, they focus on different topics. Eileen Guana’s chapter examines the actions of the Environmental Protection Agency body that adjudicates administrative appeals of permitting decisions to argue that environmental justice challenges to new permits have been largely unsuccessful. The next two chapters focus on environmental rulemaking and standard setting. Another chapter focuses on participation, while the last two focus on corrective justice—on empirical data in one and legal decisions in the other. Each of these chapters is tightly focused on a specific topic and makes its argument very clearly. One of the strengths of the volume is the clear writing within each chapter, although the major weakness is tying the individual chapters to the overall thematic framework of distributive/procedural/corrective. The strength of this volume is that speaks explicitly to the fields of environmental policy implementation, as well as to regulators, policy analysts, lawyers/practitioners, and so on (as well as those training in those fields as undergraduates and graduates). The downside of such an approach is that some of the chapters are so grounded in their specific fields that interdisciplinary orientations to the same topic are not included in the analysis. For example, several important works in sociology (Jill Harrison) and political philosophy (Davis Schlosberg) explicitly address environmental justice from the competing notions of justice that Konisky uses as the overall framework for the volume. Also, there is an important question of whether state-level analyses are relevant, since certain places like California have embarked upon aggressive state-level environmental justice policy (several scholars have written at length on California’s environmental justice policies in pesticide drift, climate change, and water policy, for example). As Konisky writes, however, Failed Promises cannot cover all dimensions of environmental justice but chooses as its focus “the regulatory activity at the heart of the environmental protection system” (p. 17). On this vitally important topic, he has successfully assembled an impressive array of authors in spelling out how environmental justice matters in federal policy. It is a vital contribution to several fields, particularly where environmental policy meets practice.

Keywords: justice; policy; volume; analysis; environmental justice; decision making

Journal Title: Perspectives on Politics
Year Published: 2017

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