Mobility-based environmental justice

Understanding housing disparity in real-time exposure to air pollution and momentary psychological stress in Beijing, China

Journal Article (2021)
Author(s)

Y. Tao (Peking University, TU Delft - Urban Studies)

Yanwei Chai (Peking University)

Xue Zhang (Fujian Normal University)

Jie Yang (Peking University)

Mei Po Kwan (Universiteit Utrecht, Chinese University of Hong Kong)

Research Group
Urban Studies
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114372
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Research Group
Urban Studies
Volume number
287

Abstract

Environmental justice is a crucial environmental and social problem. Previous research in the cities of developed countries has found that ethnic minorities and low-income people were disproportionately exposed to the residential environment with more serious environmental risks. This study proposed a transition from the residence-based perspective to a mobility-based and context-aware approach to reinterpret environmental justice with a focus on the air pollution issue in urban China. A novel research protocol combining geographic ecological momentary assessment and portable air pollutant sensors was developed to collect and analyze real-time data of air pollution exposure and psychological stress for residents living in the same residential neighborhood of Beijing, China. The results show that residents of different types of housing were exposed to varying PM2.5 concentrations although they experienced similar levels of air pollution in their residential neighborhoods. Residents of public low-rent housing were the disadvantaged group because of their limited mobility, exposure to serious air pollution at home, and insensitive stress responses to air pollution. These findings not only uncover the mobility-based environmental justice issue in the context of government-led and egalitarianism-pursuing urban China, but also provide references for the residential mix policy on how to narrow the disparity in environmental pollution exposure from the perspective of human mobility.

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