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Lindsey Dillon 
Toxic City 
Redevelopment and Environmental Justice in San Francisco

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Toxic City presents a novel critique of postindustrial green gentrification through a study of Bayview-Hunters Point, a historically Black neighborhood in San Francisco. As cities across the United States clean up and transform contaminated waterfronts and abandoned factories into inviting spaces of urban nature and green living, working-class residents—who previously lived with the effects of state abandonment, corporate divestment, and industrial pollution—are threatened with displacement at the very moment these neighborhoods are cleaned, greened, and revitalized. Lindsey Dillon details how residents of Bayview-Hunters Point have fought for years for toxic cleanup and urban redevelopment to be a reparative process and how their efforts are linked to long-standing struggles for Black community control and self-determination. She argues that environmental racism is part of a long history of harm linked to slavery and its afterlives and concludes that environmental justice can be conceived within a larger project of reparations.
€32.99
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Table of Content

Contents


List of Illustrations 

Acknowledgments 


Introduction: “I Want to Be Made Whole” 


1. The Wastelanding of Southeast San Francisco 

2. Black Counterplanning for a New Hunters Point 

3. The Politics of Environmental Repair 

4. The Dust of Redevelopment 


Conclusion: Reparative Environmental Justice 


Notes 

Bibliography 

Index

About the author

Lindsey Dillon is a critical human geographer and Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Santa Cruz.
Language English ● Format EPUB ● Pages 242 ● ISBN 9780520396234 ● File size 5.1 MB ● Publisher University of California Press ● Published 2024 ● Edition 1 ● Downloadable 24 months ● Currency EUR ● ID 9330410 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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