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Publications (9 of 9) Show all publications
Thomson, J. & Gioielli, R. R. (2025). Introduction: Fair Housing and Environmental Justice. Environmental History, 30(3), 518-532
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Introduction: Fair Housing and Environmental Justice
2025 (English)In: Environmental History, ISSN 1084-5453, E-ISSN 1930-8892, Vol. 30, no 3, p. 518-532Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
University of Chicago Press, 2025
National Category
Human Geography
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-371180 (URN)10.1086/735917 (DOI)001513572600011 ()2-s2.0-105016544607 (Scopus ID)
Note

QC 20251204

Available from: 2025-10-08 Created: 2025-10-08 Last updated: 2025-12-04Bibliographically approved
Gioielli, R. R. (2025). The American Single-Family Home: Towards a Social and Environmental History. Global Environment, 18(2), 336-369
Open this publication in new window or tab >>The American Single-Family Home: Towards a Social and Environmental History
2025 (English)In: Global Environment, ISSN 1973-3739, E-ISSN 2053-7352, Vol. 18, no 2, p. 336-369Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Over the course of the twentieth-century, the primary path toward the ‘good life’ in the United States involved the purchase of a single family home in the suburbs, which promised financial security, social independence and access to a healthy environmental and verdant greens-pace. But the system that developed was also built on racial exclusion and unsustainable and environmentally destructive levels of resource consumption. An examination of the spaces of the single-family home shows the challenges in creating a just and sustainable good life, as the social meaning and material realities of the system become intimately tied together.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Liverpool University Press, 2025
Keywords
consumption, housing, race, suburbs, sustainability
National Category
Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-366563 (URN)10.3828/whpge.63837646622526 (DOI)2-s2.0-105008215454 (Scopus ID)
Note

QC 20250710

Available from: 2025-07-10 Created: 2025-07-10 Last updated: 2025-07-10Bibliographically approved
Gioielli, R. R. (2024). Ecological by Design: A History from Scandinavia [Review]. Technology and culture, 65(4), 1383-1385
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Ecological by Design: A History from Scandinavia
2024 (English)In: Technology and culture, ISSN 0040-165X, E-ISSN 1097-3729, Vol. 65, no 4, p. 1383-1385Article, book review (Other academic) Published
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Project MUSE, 2024
National Category
Ecology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-359504 (URN)10.1353/tech.2024.a940487 (DOI)001375590200015 ()
Note

QC 20250204

Available from: 2025-02-04 Created: 2025-02-04 Last updated: 2025-02-04Bibliographically approved
Gioielli, R. R. (2024). Toxic Debt: An Environmental Justice History of Detroit [Review]. Journal of American History, 110(4), 794-796
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Toxic Debt: An Environmental Justice History of Detroit
2024 (English)In: Journal of American History, ISSN 0021-8723, E-ISSN 1945-2314, Vol. 110, no 4, p. 794-796Article, book review (Other academic) Published
Abstract [en]

Recenserat verk/The reviewed work:

Rector, Josiah (2022). Toxic Debt: An Environmental Justice History of Detroit. [Chapel Hill]: University of North Carolina Press.

ISBN: 978-1-4696-6576-4, 978-1-4696-6575-7, 978-1-4696-6577-1, 979-8-8908-5940-2

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2024
National Category
Technology and Environmental History
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-347009 (URN)10.1093/jahist/jaad399 (DOI)001196533300009 ()
Note

QC 20250611

Available from: 2025-06-10 Created: 2025-06-10 Last updated: 2025-06-11Bibliographically approved
Dümpelmann, S., Gioielli, R. R., Pauleit, S., Sinha, A., Wright, K. & Zhang, A. (2023). Making Urban Environments: Infrastructures of Power, Resistance and Negotiation. Global Environment, 16(2), 222-257
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Making Urban Environments: Infrastructures of Power, Resistance and Negotiation
Show others...
2023 (English)In: Global Environment, ISSN 1973-3739, E-ISSN 2053-7352, Vol. 16, no 2, p. 222-257Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

As scholars from the fields of history, anthropology and animal studies, as well as landscape planning and management, we discuss various forms of urban and urbanising infrastructures and their political entanglements. Questioning and illuminating how various actors and their practices build and shape urban environments, we address topics ranging from the black soldier fly - used as biotechnological infrastructure to manage waste - to other nonhumans, like macaques -developing and negotiating their own urbanisms; from plants and community gardens - used as green infrastructures to provide shade and food, and social infrastructures to endure and resist - to the transportation infrastructures that humans have built to both segregate and divide, as well as to live and unite. In case studies situated across the world, we present different conceptualisations of infrastructures as complex human-nonhuman co-productions that shape the modern city.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Liverpool University Press, 2023
National Category
Interdisciplinary Studies in Humanities and Arts
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-364351 (URN)10.3197/ge.2023.160203 (DOI)001009861000003 ()2-s2.0-85177210006 (Scopus ID)
Note

QC 20250611

Available from: 2025-06-11 Created: 2025-06-11 Last updated: 2025-06-11Bibliographically approved
Gioielli, R. R. (2023). Nature's Laboratory: Environmental Thought and Labor Radicalism in Chicago, 1886–1937 by Elizabeth Grennan Browning [Review]. H-Environment
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Nature's Laboratory: Environmental Thought and Labor Radicalism in Chicago, 1886–1937 by Elizabeth Grennan Browning
2023 (English)In: H-EnvironmentArticle, book review (Other academic) Published
Abstract [en]

Recenserat verk/The reviewed work:

Elizabeth Grennan Browning. Nature's Laboratory: Environmental Thought and Labor Radicalism in Chicago, 1886–1937. [Baltimore]: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2022.

ISBN 978-1-4214-4521-2.

National Category
Technology and Environmental History
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-364294 (URN)
Note

QC 20250611

Available from: 2025-06-10 Created: 2025-06-10 Last updated: 2025-06-11Bibliographically approved
Gioielli, R. R. (2023). Urban Environmental Justice Movements in the United States. In: Paul Rosier (Ed.), Environmental Justice in North America: (pp. 33-58). Routledge
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Urban Environmental Justice Movements in the United States
2023 (English)In: Environmental Justice in North America / [ed] Paul Rosier, Routledge, 2023, p. 33-58Chapter in book (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

Some of America's most severe environmental inequalities occur in its cities. This was especially the case in the decades immediately following World War Two, when white flight, deindustrialization and disinvestment, urban renewal and highway construction led a massive increase in particular types of urban environmental issues, especially in the country's older industrial cities. In response, city residents organized a series of highly local, grassroots but robust movements to address immediate harms but also create more just and livable cities. This chapter tells the story of that activism, while also placing it within the context of the longer history of urban environmental activism in the United States, the environmental movement and the emergence of environmental justice activism in the 1980s.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Routledge, 2023
National Category
Technology and Environmental History
Research subject
History of Science, Technology and Environment
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-347017 (URN)10.4324/9781003214380-3 (DOI)2-s2.0-85173122164 (Scopus ID)
Note

Part of ISBN 9781003214380

QC 20250505

Available from: 2025-05-04 Created: 2025-05-04 Last updated: 2025-05-05Bibliographically approved
Gioielli, R. (2020). "Pruitt-lgoe in the Suburbs": Connecting White Flight, Sprawl, and Climate Change in Metropolitan America. Amerikastudien, 65(2), 213-233
Open this publication in new window or tab >>"Pruitt-lgoe in the Suburbs": Connecting White Flight, Sprawl, and Climate Change in Metropolitan America
2020 (English)In: Amerikastudien, ISSN 0340-2827, Vol. 65, no 2, p. 213-233Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

This article explores the connections between racial inequality and fossil fuel-intensive sprawl in the post-civil rights metropolitan landscape, through a case study of the Blackjack housing controversy. In 1970, a local religious group tried to build a low-income housing project in Blackjack, Missouri, a bedroom community four miles northwest of the city of St. Louis. Local residents opposed to the project argued that public housing would bring the crime, poverty, and social disorder of the city to the suburbs. Although they were forced to strip their opposition of overtly racist language, these White suburbanites were part of a nation-wide project to racialize, and thus delegitimize, the extension of urban form into American suburbs, including public housing and public transportation. When these efforts failed, as they did in Black Jack, inner-ring suburbs began to desegregate, and in response, Whites again fled, further out, to second-ring suburbs and exurbs. This process, which has played out across American cities from the 1960s until the present day, has had devastating consequences for racial and economic inequality, but also on the global climate. Millions of White Americans, driven by their desire to maintain metropolitan racial segregation, have become hostile to the forms of urban infrastructure that would create less carbon-intensive cities, recreating racist, auto-intensive sprawl farther out into the countryside.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
JSTOR, 2020
National Category
Humanities and the Arts History
Research subject
History of Science, Technology and Environment
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-347007 (URN)
Note

QC 20240529

Available from: 2024-05-27 Created: 2024-05-27 Last updated: 2024-07-02Bibliographically approved
Gioielli, R. R. (2018). Environmental and Conservation Movements in Metropolitan America. In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History: . Oxford University Press
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Environmental and Conservation Movements in Metropolitan America
2018 (English)In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History, Oxford University Press, 2018Chapter in book (Refereed)
Abstract [en]

By the late 19th century, American cities like Chicago and New York were marvels of the industrializing world. The shock urbanization of the previous quarter century, however, brought on a host of environmental problems. Skies were acrid with coal smoke, and streams ran fetid with raw sewage. Disease outbreaks were as common as parks and green space was rare. In response to these hazards, particular groups of urban residents responded to them with a series of activist movements to reform public and private policies and practices, from the 1890s until the end of the 20th century. Those environmental burdens were never felt equally, with the working class, poor, immigrants, and minorities bearing an overwhelming share of the city’s toxic load. By the 1930s, many of the Progressive era reform efforts were finally bearing fruit. Air pollution was regulated, access to clean water improved, and even America’s smallest cities built robust networks of urban parks. But despite this invigoration of the public sphere, after World War II, for many the solution to the challenges of a dense modern city was a private choice: suburbanization. Rather than continue to work to reform and reimagine the city, they chose to leave it, retreating to the verdant (and pollution free) greenfields at the city’s edge. These moves, encouraged and subsidized by local and federal policies, provided healthier environments for the mostly white, middle-class suburbanites, but created a new set of environmental problems for the poor, working-class, and minority residents they left behind. Drained of resources and capital, cities struggled to maintain aging infrastructure and regulate remaining industry and then exacerbated problems with destructive urban renewal and highway construction projects. These remaining urban residents responded with a dynamic series of activist movements that emerged out of the social and community activism of the 1960s and presaged the contemporary environmental justice movement.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Oxford University Press, 2018
National Category
Technology and Environmental History
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-347001 (URN)10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.601 (DOI)
Note

QC 20250505

Available from: 2025-05-04 Created: 2025-05-04 Last updated: 2025-05-05Bibliographically approved
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Identifiers
ORCID iD: ORCID iD iconorcid.org/0000-0002-5362-3338

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