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Society & Natural Resources
An International Journal
Volume 22, 2009 - Issue 8
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Articles

Human–Environment Interactions and Environmental Justice: How Do Diverse Parents of Asthmatic Children Minimize Hazards?

Pages 727-743 | Received 23 Jul 2007, Accepted 17 Nov 2007, Published online: 10 Aug 2009

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Read on this site (3)

Timothy W. Collins, Sara E. Grineski & Shawna M. Nadybal. (2022) A Comparative Approach for Environmental Justice Analysis: Explaining Divergent Societal Distributions of Particulate Matter and Ozone Pollution across U.S. Neighborhoods. Annals of the American Association of Geographers 112:2, pages 522-541.
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Jonathan I. Rocha, Sara E. Grineski & Timothy W. Collins. (2017) A qualitative examination of factors shaping high and low exposures to hazardous air pollutants among Hispanic households in Miami. Local Environment 22:10, pages 1252-1267.
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Articles from other publishers (4)

Àlex Boso, Boris Álvarez, Christian Oltra, Jaime Garrido, Carlos Muñoz & Álvaro Hofflinger. (2020) Out of sight, out of mind: participatory sensing for monitoring indoor air quality. Environmental Monitoring and Assessment 192:2.
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Samantha Teixeira & Anita Zuberi. (2016) Mapping the Racial Inequality in Place: Using Youth Perceptions to Identify Unequal Exposure to Neighborhood Environmental Hazards. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 13:9, pages 844.
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Sara E. Grineski, Timothy W. Collins & Hector A. Olvera. (2015) Local variability in the impacts of residential particulate matter and pest exposure on children’s wheezing severity: a geographically weighted regression analysis of environmental health justice. Population and Environment 37:1, pages 22-43.
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Sara E. Grineski. (2009) Marginalization and health: children's asthma on the Texas‐Mexico border. International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy 29:5/6, pages 287-304.
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