A new sgade of green: from historic environmental inequalities over green amenities to exclusive green growth in Austin

James J.T. Connolly, Mateus Lira

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2 Cites (Scopus)

Resum

Austin is traditionally known for being Texas’ most green and ecological city, with 15% of land within city limits dedicated to parks and other green spaces and an abundance of regional nature reserves. The city was founded as a capital with priority given to preserving the natural beauty of the Texas Hill Country over development, making Austin a rare exception to the common model of American industrial urbanism (Busch 2017). As a consequence of a long history of spatial segregation along racial lines, access to the healthy environments and natural green amenities with which the city is endowed has never been equitable. This trend has continued, as the city itself is becoming a privileged space due to expanded gentrification in once-marginalized neighborhoods such as East Austin. It is this history of racial divide and recurring environmental privilege that has shaped local activists’ responses to green inequalities.

Idioma originalAnglès
Títol de la publicacióThe Green City and Social Injustice
Subtítol de la publicació21 Tales from North America and Europe
EditorTaylor and Francis AS
Pàgines148-159
Nombre de pàgines12
ISBN (electrònic)9781000471601
ISBN (imprès)9781032024134
DOIs
Estat de la publicacióPublicada - 1 de gen. 2021

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