Ensuring just environmental impacts and opportunities for all people.
Environmental Justice is defined by the Environmental Protection Agency as the equitable and ethical engagement of communities in planning, designing and implementing evidence-based policies and practices for the well-being of human and natural ecosystems and in addressing the impacts of new and existing policies across all social structures. In addition to pursuing scholarly research in environmental justice, the Center for the Environment applies environmental justice as a guiding principle for research in the other themes. The applied nature of environmental justice requires close community engagement and transdisciplinary partnerships. These partnerships span local, national, and global contexts. With existing cross school and interdisciplinary strengths in air pollution, public health, social work, social systems and advocacy, the Center builds upon, advances and expands existing research and collaborations.
Molly Metzger, PhD
Senior Lecturer of Social Work
Metzger focuses on local, state, and federal housing policies, examining how these policies often reproduce patterns of inequity. Her course “Community Development Practice,” engages with community partners to improve neighborhoods in south St. Louis
Environmental justice scholars
Meredith Malone
Curator, Kemper Art Museum
Contemporary Art and Its Role in Addressing the Climate Crisis and Its Impact on Global Health, Plant-human-land Relations, Seed Keeping and Preservation of Biodiversity, Environmental Communication
Kenneth Andrews
Tileston Professor of Arts and Sciences, Sociology
Social Movements, Protest, Advocacy, Policy
Constance Vale
Chair of Undergraduate Architecture and Associate Professor of Architecture
Smart Cities, Artificial Intelligence, Multi-modal Transit, Active Transportation