Vehicular air pollution has created an ongoing air quality and public health crisis. Despite growing knowledge of racial injustice in exposure levels, less is known about the relationship between the production of and exposure to such pollution. This study assesses pollution burden by testing whether local populations' vehicular air pollution exposure is proportional to how much they drive. Through a Los Angeles, California case study we examine how this relates to race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status -- and how these relationships vary across the region. We find that, all else equal, tracts whose residents drive less are exposed to more air pollution, as are tracts with a less-White population. Commuters from majority-White tracts disproportionately drive through non-White tracts, compared to the inverse. Decades of racially-motivated freeway infrastructure planning and residential segregation shape today's disparities in who produces vehicular air pollution and who is exposed to it, but opportunities exist for urban planning and transport policy to mitigate this injustice.
翻译:尽管人们越来越了解接触水平上的种族不公正,但人们对这种污染的生产和接触之间的关系却不太了解。本研究通过检验当地居民的车辆空气污染暴露是否与其驱动量成正比来评估污染负担。通过洛杉矶,加利福尼亚州案例研究,我们研究了这与种族、族裔和社会经济地位的关系,以及这些关系在整个区域有何不同。我们发现,在其他方面,居民推动较少的地带受到更多的空气污染,在白人人口较少的地带也是如此。与反向情况相比,来自多数白色地带的公交员通过非白色地带的过度驱动。十年来,出于种族动机的高速公路基础设施规划和住宅隔离决定了今天在谁造成车辆空气污染和谁受到污染方面的差异,但城市规划和运输政策也有机会减轻这种不公正现象。