Rules of Engagement: A Study of Community-Facility Interaction in an Environmental Justice Community

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Gallagher, Deborah Rigling

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Green, Megan

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2016-04-22T23:20:34Z

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2016-04-22T23:20:34Z

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2016-04-22

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Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences

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This Masters Project explores the phenomena of how an environmental justice community and its neighboring facilities interacted during a recent Title V permit application process. A case study methodology was used to define a study area, identify cases and interview subjects, and collect and analyze data. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with three key actors in the North Birmingham (Alabama) neighborhood. These participants provided different perspectives on community-facility engagement: a facility manager, a neighborhood leader and a permitting agency. Data analysis consisted of thematic coding using the framework originated by Bowen, Newenham-Kahindi, and Herremans (2010) and incorporated inductive coding to identify emergent themes. The results showed that community-facility interaction isn’t only experienced during the permitting process; that the neighborhood leader desired engagement efforts that go beyond what is legally required; and that unexpected external factors can impacted community-facility interactions.

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/11842

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en_US

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Environmental justice

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Community engagement

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Community-Facility Interaction

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Title V

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Rules of Engagement: A Study of Community-Facility Interaction in an Environmental Justice Community

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Master's project

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0

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