Abstract

Water injustice in the United States takes on many forms including water contamination in drinking water; water unaffordability and water shutoffs; lack of democratic water governance; issues around water privatization and control; inadequate stormwater management systems and practice; urban flooding and disproportionate water-related impacts of climate change; water infrastructure-induced gentrification and displacement; aged and polluting water and wastewater infrastructure in cities; and inadequate, failing, or often non-existent sanitation or municipal sewer service access in small towns and rural areas. 3
We are interested in research that characterizes and analyzes the factors that shape, produce, and reproduce forms of water justice and injustice in the United States and internationally, as well as research that advances solutions to these urgent and longstanding problems. 4 In recent years, case studies from Flint, Benton Harbor and Detroit, Michigan; Washington, DC; Lowndes County, Alabama; Standing Rock, North and South Dakota; Mebane, North Carolina, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania among other locales have brought attention to both historical and contemporary forms of water injustice as well as community resistance and solutions-focused action through community owned and managed research, participatory approaches, direct action, community-led watershed restoration, rights advocacy, and the fight for access to basic amenities. 5 To help better codify water justice issues and the related research and practice of academic and community scholars in environmental justice literature, we are especially interested in elevating community voices and the needs of environmentally overburdened communities that have historically been excluded from water governance, water management, and the development of water policy.
All manuscripts should be submitted online at
Environmental justice and water as a human right
Water insecurity as environmental injustice
Environmental justice and drinking water, wastewater, or stormwater infrastructure
Specific types of water contamination (such as lead, PFAS, Chromium VI, sewage, multiple contaminants and cumulative risks, etc.) in environmentally overburdened communities.
Green stormwater infrastructure as a driver of green gentrification
Environmental justice as a tenant of water governance
Indigenous water rights
Informality and water
Environmental justice through water affordability, accessibility, and reliability
The intersection of water justice and health equity
Community-driven solutions to advance water justice
Advancing water justice through federal policy
Community-led watershed restoration
Water infrastructure planning and authentic community engagement
Water management, health, and environmental justice
Water quality and health equity
Water, climate change, and health disparities
Water and climate justice
Community science and community-driven citizen science approaches to improving water quality
The environmental injustice of fracking
Water, environmental justice, and the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals
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Queries to the editor to propose a topic prior to submission are encouraged. Please contact Journals Manager Jamie Devereaux at
