Journal ArticleParallel publicationPublished versionDOI: 10.48548/pubdata-3202

Measuring environmental (in)justices: Insights from a systematic literature review on methodological approaches

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Date of first publication2025-11-20
Date of publication in PubData 2026-03-30

Language of the resource

English

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Variant form of DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2025.113889
Loos, J., Gohr, C., Zafra-Calvo, N., Cortés-Capano, G., Tonninger, A. L., & von Wehrden, H. (2025). Measuring environmental (in)justices: Insights from a systematic literature review on methodological approaches. iScience, 28(12), Article 113889.
Published in ISSN: 2589-0042
iScience

Abstract

Environmental (in)justice research uses various conceptual frameworks and methodological approaches, leading to fragmentation across contexts and disciplines. Our systematic review provides a methodological overview of how environmental (in)justice has been studied in 421 English-language scientific articles. Most studies approach environmental (in)justice from a quantitative and interdisciplinary perspective, primarily using purposive sampling, secondary data, and GIS/remote sensing tools with an emphasis on distributive justice. Although there is a notable diversification over time in data collection and analysis, there is a strong geographic bias with short-term, locally focused, and limited actor involvement, though actor diversity is growing over time. We identified eight thematic clusters with distinct methodological patterns: health, pollution, governance, climate change, collaboration, access, and green space. The lack of broadly adopted methodological approaches for evaluating environmental (in)justices largely stems from the context-specific, multi-scalar nature of cases and the philosophical and normative diversity embedded in the EJ concept itself.

Keywords

Earth Science; Environmental Science; Social Science

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