11 research outputs found

    Environmental Justice, Transit Equity and the Place for Immigrants in Toronto

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    In response to population growth and events, Toronto is currently in the midst of debates about transportation planning. However, the perspectives of immigrants, especially women, who depend heavily on public transit, are often missing from academic and policy debates on transportation planning in Toronto. Due to Toronto’s changing demographic landscape, a transit planning strategy that is based on a deeper understanding of how immigrant groups travel across the city can further social equity in transportation. Drawing on qualitative interviews with immigrants on their experiences of public transit in Toronto, the paper proposes an environmental justice framework in order to consider the equity and sustainability issues inherent in Toronto stakeholders’ focus on transit expansion. The research fi ndings highlight the limited aff ordability of public transit, the poor servicing and connectivity of transit networks, and the resulting barriers to accessing work opportunities across the region. The paper concludes by highlighting the need for new directions in transit policy and planning that can better address the changing demographics and social and spatial divisions in the city

    Energy Solutions, Neo-Liberalism, and Social Diversity in Toronto, Canada

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    In response to the dominance of green capitalist discourses in Canada’s environmental movement, in this paper, we argue that strategies to improve energy policy must also provide mechanisms to address social conflicts and social disparities. Environmental justice is proposed as an alternative to mainstream environmentalism, one that seeks to address systemic social and spatial exclusion encountered by many racialized immigrants in Toronto as a result of neo-liberal and green capitalist municipal policy and that seeks to position marginalized communities as valued contributors to energy solutions. We examine Toronto-based municipal state initiatives aimed at reducing energy use while concurrently stimulating growth (specifically, green economy/green jobs and ‘smart growth’). By treating these as instruments of green capitalism, we illustrate the utility of environmental justice applied to energy-related problems and as a means to analyze stakeholders’ positions in the context of neo-liberalism and green capitalism, and as opening possibilities for resistance

    New Approaches to Enforcement and Compliance with Labour Regulatory Standards: The Case of Ontario, Canada

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    Spatiality and Environmental Justice in Parkdale (Toronto)

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    Faisant partie d’un projet destinĂ© Ă  identifier les injustices environnementales au Canada, cet article dĂ©finit une analyse critique de l’espace social afin de comprendre les problĂšmes de justice environnementale dans une communautĂ© urbaine du Canada. Les injustices environnementales ayant un impact sur des situations gĂ©ographiques particuliĂšres prĂ©sentent un aspect spatial fixe et trĂšs apparent. Cependant, je soutiens qu’il est nĂ©cessaire d’avoir une plus large vue d’ensemble de la maniĂšre dont les politiques produisent et reproduisent l’espace, afin d’expliquer par quel moyen les manifestations spatiales des transformations politiques et Ă©conomiques peuvent crĂ©er de nouvelles et vivaces injustices environnementales. Dans la premiĂšre partie de cet article, je souligne quelques-unes des composantes-clĂ©s de la conception de la justice environnementale. Ensuite, Ă  partir des travaux critiques Ă©laborĂ©s dans le champ de la gĂ©ographie humaine, en particulier ceux d’Edward Soja et de Henri Lefebvre, j’énumĂšre les limites de l’approche usuelle de l’espace dans la littĂ©rature amĂ©ricaine sur la justice environnementale. La plus grande partie de cet article prĂ©sente mes arguments en faveur d’une vision critique de l’espace social Ă  partir des rĂ©flexions issues de mes recherches de terrain dans la communautĂ© de Parkdale Ă  Toronto.As part of the project to name environmental injustices in Canada, this article explores the significance of a critical analysis of social space to understand environmental justice problems in an urban Canadian community. Environmental injustices that impact on particular geographical locations have a readily apparent, fixed spatial aspect. However, I argue that a broader view to the politics of how space is produced and reproduced is necessary to explain the way in which the spatial manifestations of political economic transformations can create new and dynamic environmental injustices (Massey 1993). I at first outline some of the key components of the environmental justice perspective. Then, by drawing on critical work in the area of human geography, in particular Edward Soja’s (1996) and Henri Lefebvre’s (1991) work, I review the limitations of the dominant approach to spatiality in the American environmental justice literature. I then present my arguments in favour of a critical view to social space through a consideration of my field research findings in the Toronto community of Parkdale

    Out of our inner city backyards : Re-scaling urban environmental health inequity assessment

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    In this paper, we report the results of a three-year research project (2008 - 2011) that aimed to identify urban environmental health inequities using a photography-mediated qualitative approach adapted for comparative neighbourhood-level assessment. The project took place in Vancouver, Toronto, and Winnipeg, Canada and involved a total of 49 inner city community researchers who compared environmental health conditions in numerous neighbourhoods across each city. Using the social determinants of health as a guiding framework, community researchers observed a wide range of differences in health-influencing private and public spaces, including sanitation services, housing, parks and gardens, art displays, and community services. The comparative process enabled community researchers to articulate in five distinct ways how such observable conditions represented system level inequities. The findings inform efforts to shift environmental health intervention from constricted action within derelict urban districts to more coordinated mobilization for health equity in the city.Medicine, Faculty ofNon UBCPopulation and Public Health (SPPH), School ofReviewedFacultyGraduateUndergraduat

    New Approaches to Enforcement and Compliance with Labour Regulatory Standards: The Case of Ontario, Canada

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    This report maps current enforcement and compliance measures and practices in Ontario’s regulation of employment, particularly as they relate to precarious employment. It evaluates the effectiveness of Ontario’s enforcement regimes, focusing on Employment Standards (ES) and Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) legislation, and sets these regimes in the context of those operating in jurisdictions across and outside Canada. Through this process, it identifies and evaluates potential reforms to improve regulatory effectiveness, particularly for workers in precarious jobs. The central argument is that there are fundamental deficiencies in both of these enforcement regimes: each, albeit in different ways, is out of step with the realities of the contemporary labour market and each demands more proactive approaches to regulation combined with, where appropriate, innovative reactive and voluntary measures that are embedded in strong public enforcement
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