By Published: April 25, 2017

With environmental justice programs showing minimal success in bringing equality to low-income communities, Jill Harrison is actively exploring bureaucratic causes. This year, the associate professor in sociology at the 麻豆视频 will have the time to comprehensively encapsulate her research concerning how regulatory culture may be facilitating this failure, thanks to a fellowship from (ACLS), which funds advanced research in the humanities.

鈥淚鈥檓 just exceptionally grateful for the opportunity that the university and the ACLS are giving me to develop this research,鈥 said Harrison, who was recently awarded a one-year fellowship to pursue her studies.

The ACLS provides half the funding to grant Harrison a year鈥檚 salary to pursue the research without having to attend to her teaching duties as an associate professor in the CU Department of Sociology, and CU provides the other half of funding.

Harrison

Jill Harrison

Harrison is hoping to publish a book on the research 鈥 titled 鈥淩egulatory Culture and the Failure of Government Programs for Environmental Justice鈥 in the fellowship award 鈥 which she has been developing for years. MIT Press published her first book in 2011, 鈥,鈥 an award-winning investigation of how rural communities are poisoned by chemical farming practices and fight for stronger pesticide regulations.

Harrison has also published recent academic articles pertaining directly to her current research, including: 鈥淏ureaucrats鈥 Tacit Understandings and Social Movement Policy Implementation,鈥 published in 2016 in Social Problems; and 鈥淐oopted Environmental Justice? Activists roles in shaping EJ policy,鈥 published in 2015 by Environmental Sociology.

In those articles, she explored how environmental justice practices had deviated from EJ movement priorities in select grant programs and organizations, but this year Harrison hopes to take a more comprehensive look at how environmental justice programs are marginalized by bureaucratic priorities.

鈥淥ther scholars have provided information about why EJ efforts have been so slow to succeed, and it鈥檚 important to note that I鈥檓 building on this information,鈥 Harrison said. Much of the research has focused on factors such as limited funding and overworked staff, as well as analytical limitations such as the inability to assess the cumulative effects of multiple chemical exposures.

鈥淲hat I鈥檓 adding to this discussion is what I鈥檝e learned in my conversations with government employees,鈥 said Harrison, whose primary research methodologies are in-depth confidential interviews and group observation of government agency staff. Often the employees assigned to track and promote environmental justice priorities feel their input is marginalized by other employees whose priorities are aligned more with long-standing agency concerns and practices, such as reducing aggregate levels of pollution and protecting wilderness areas and wildlife.

What I鈥檓 adding to this discussion is what I鈥檝e learned in my conversations with government employees."

鈥淭hey can also face resistance from their colleagues who may actually protest the priorities of EJ reform, and some feel bullied from making proposals,鈥 Harrison said. 鈥淢any feel everyday resistance to focusing on their EJ programs.鈥

Overall EPA funding, of course, is threatened by the Trump Administration鈥檚 proposed budget, though Harrison indicated that much of her field research is already complete. Many EJ advocates believe that the EPA suggested cuts will be aimed directly at environmental justice measures, which have been weakly funded since President Clinton鈥檚 1994 executive order on EJ.

Harrison said she already has a publisher interested in her work, which she hopes will become something of a 鈥渃ross-over success鈥 for both academic and general audiences, much as 鈥淧esticide Drift鈥 became. More so, she hopes the research will illuminate problems with enhancing environmental justice programs and help create a culture for success.

鈥淚鈥檒l be spending most the year reviewing my interviews to analyze the roots of this resistance and how that dovetails with broader ideologies of racial and economic injustice,鈥 Harrison said.

鈥淲ith all the environmental agencies in the United States, it feels very abstract, and I鈥檓 figuring out how to make my recommendations very concrete,鈥 Harrison said.

But 鈥渨hat鈥檚 being addressed is how to reduce in the inequalities so that your race, or your income, doesn鈥檛 determine your life chances.鈥