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  1. Gender, Technology, and Environmental Policy.Sylvia E. Washington - 1999 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 19 (5):365-371.
    This article is tied to the main objective of my research, which is to determine how environmental concepts about an urban industrial community were communicated to working-class immigrant and migrant children and their responses to these efforts. I would like this research to contribute to the understanding of why these groups have traditionally been subjected to a disproportionate amount of toxic and hazardous waste in their communities. As a result of this phenomena, the health of children and nonworking women in (...)
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