TY - JOUR TI - Garbage governmentalities and environmental justice in New Jersey DO - https://doi.org/doi:10.7282/T3HD7ZHV PY - 2017 AB - During the 1970s, under the banner of environmentalism and the purview of the newly-created New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, the State of New Jersey implemented a municipal solid waste disposal policy that called for a garbage incinerator in each of its 21 counties and the Hackensack Meadowlands District. The efforts to site the garbage incinerators led to a forceful social movement to oppose them. In the aftermath of this policy, five garbage incinerators were finally established, one of them in the Ironbound neighborhood of Newark. This facility receives the garbage not only from all of Essex County, but also from other jurisdictions such as New York City, with the environmental and quality of life impacts being borne by Ironbound’s residents. In this community, conditions of environmental injustice exist, whereby the community receives the garbage from its comparatively more affluent and whiter neighbors. Using the Ironbound neighborhood of Newark and Essex County as a case study area, this dissertation examines how conditions of environmental injustice in the Ironbound are produced and perpetuated by the collective enactment of our governmental approaches to the problem of increasing garbage production in New Jersey since the 1870s. The garbage flow control policy New Jersey implemented in the 1970s is a focus point in this analysis, but this dissertation contextualizes the incinerator location strategy within the history and geography of garbage governmental management in the state. This research is informed by the scholarly literatures in environmental justice studies, governmentality, and social science studies that examine the intersection of garbage and society. Environmental injustice conditions are generally attributed in the literature to fundamental power struggles among corporate entities and social groups waged along race and class differences, with State institutions mediating these social conflicts and brokering their outcome. Using insights from the governmentality literature, this dissertation explores another explanatory framework for environmental injustice that focuses on how our collective and mundane day-to-day enactment of garbage governmental policy fundamentally produces and perpetuates conditions of environmental injustice. In this discussion, the social science literature on garbage provides key insights on garbage as a social material subject to myriad forms of governmental interventions that attempt to shape our social relations, and into the governmental rationalities, processes, and practices that have been selected by governmental authorities and that have become embodied by us, the population, in our day-to-day lives. Fundamentally, this dissertation argues that our collective governmental approach to garbage supports the power structures and infrastructures we normally point to as culprits of environmental injustice. This dissertation uses a mixed methods approach that combines both qualitative and quantitative research methods, with the qualitative research as the dominant approach. The qualitative research consists of document reviews and qualitative content analysis of State of New Jersey and Ironbound community documents; the Ironbound neighborhood of Newark and Essex County as a case study area; focus groups with residents of the Ironbound as the impacted neighborhood, and of Montclair as a non-impacted community served by the incinerator; and key informant interviews of environmental justice and solid waste management activists and experts. The quantitative research uses Geographic Information Systems to map garbage disposal facility locations, neighborhood demographic data from various economic and racial or ethinic Census indicators, and the flows of garbage in the case study area to the incinerator in the Ironbound, to provide a picture of the materialized physical conditions which are the product of established social relations. Maps were used as visual aids in the focus groups. This dissertation finds that, under the various governmental rationalities of nuisance, environmental sanitation, and environment, we the population have historically enacted and embodied garbage governmental plans that do not question the production of garbage in the first place. Instead, we enact in our day-to-day lives governmental processes and practices to move the garbage out of private and public spaces designated clean, to disposal spaces designated as “appropriate” for receiving the garbage. Under the banner of environmentalism, we have increasingly subsumed ecological principles into the logics of the garbage disposal economy, especially when garbage becomes necessary for the efficient and profitable functioning of incinerator facilities like the one located in the Ironbound. Environmental injustice has been part and parcel of our collective efforts to govern garbage. We have failed to consider the impacts of our garbage governmental plans on communities like the Ironbound, and to recognize how we are implicated in producing environmental injustice. KW - Geography KW - Environmental justice--New Jersey KW - Refuse and refuse disposal--New Jersey LA - eng ER -