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Indoor-Outdoor Air Pollution & Environmental Justice

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Posterpeer-review

Published

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Indoor-Outdoor Air Pollution & Environmental Justice. / Booker, Douglas; Young, Paul; Walker, Gordon.
2018. Poster session presented at ETH Zurich Combustion Generated Nanoparticles, Zurich, Switzerland.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Posterpeer-review

Harvard

Booker, D, Young, P & Walker, G 2018, 'Indoor-Outdoor Air Pollution & Environmental Justice', ETH Zurich Combustion Generated Nanoparticles, Zurich, Switzerland, 18/06/18 - 21/06/18.

APA

Booker, D., Young, P., & Walker, G. (2018). Indoor-Outdoor Air Pollution & Environmental Justice. Poster session presented at ETH Zurich Combustion Generated Nanoparticles, Zurich, Switzerland.

Vancouver

Booker D, Young P, Walker G. Indoor-Outdoor Air Pollution & Environmental Justice. 2018. Poster session presented at ETH Zurich Combustion Generated Nanoparticles, Zurich, Switzerland.

Author

Booker, Douglas ; Young, Paul ; Walker, Gordon. / Indoor-Outdoor Air Pollution & Environmental Justice. Poster session presented at ETH Zurich Combustion Generated Nanoparticles, Zurich, Switzerland.

Bibtex

@conference{f9bff1f4e81a4cafbbb4d1d054edc708,
title = "Indoor-Outdoor Air Pollution & Environmental Justice",
abstract = "Environmental Justice research has focused on demonstrating the extent to which air pollution is equally—or unequally— distributed across particular defined social groups. A socioeconomic group of particular importance are children, as they are especially susceptible to air pollution because of their high inhalation rates relative to body mass, high activity concentrations, narrower lung airways, and immature immune systems (Lipsett, 1989; Pope, 1989;; Wiley et. al., 1991). More than just exhibiting negative health consequences, exposure to air pollution has also been associated with poor academic performance among schoolaged children (Mohai et al., 2011).Research has focused on outdoor air pollution, however, the conclusions drawn have a methodological myopia: the research assumes that outdoor air pollution is an accurate indicator of personal exposure. Yet, on average, people spend more than 90% of their time indoors (Klepeis et al. 2001), where levels can be 2-5 times more polluted than outdoors (Hulin, Simoni, Viegi, & AnnesiMaesano, 2012). The combination of both the length of time spent inside, and the potential for higher concentrations means that personal exposure is greater indoors rather than outdoors (Vardoulakis, 2009). However, to understand indoor air quality (IAQ), one must rely on the principle that the indoor atmosphere is an extension of the outdoor atmosphere. To understand environmental justice, one must have a holistic understanding of air pollution, indoors and outdoors.The aim of the research is to develop new understandings of patterns of exposure to poor air quality for school children. This will involve simultaneously monitoring multiple pollutants inside and outside using the NAQTS V1000 in a range of different places and indoor environments (schools and school buses) and with a fine temporal resolution. This will permit a holistic and more complex understanding of patterns of exposure for school children to be developed, including in terms of its implications for vulnerability and distributive justice.",
author = "Douglas Booker and Paul Young and Gordon Walker",
year = "2018",
month = jun,
language = "English",
note = "ETH Zurich Combustion Generated Nanoparticles : 22nd ETH-Conference on Combustion Generated Nanoparticles ; Conference date: 18-06-2018 Through 21-06-2018",
url = "http://www.nanoparticles.ch/2018_ETH-NPC-22.html",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Indoor-Outdoor Air Pollution & Environmental Justice

AU - Booker, Douglas

AU - Young, Paul

AU - Walker, Gordon

PY - 2018/6

Y1 - 2018/6

N2 - Environmental Justice research has focused on demonstrating the extent to which air pollution is equally—or unequally— distributed across particular defined social groups. A socioeconomic group of particular importance are children, as they are especially susceptible to air pollution because of their high inhalation rates relative to body mass, high activity concentrations, narrower lung airways, and immature immune systems (Lipsett, 1989; Pope, 1989;; Wiley et. al., 1991). More than just exhibiting negative health consequences, exposure to air pollution has also been associated with poor academic performance among schoolaged children (Mohai et al., 2011).Research has focused on outdoor air pollution, however, the conclusions drawn have a methodological myopia: the research assumes that outdoor air pollution is an accurate indicator of personal exposure. Yet, on average, people spend more than 90% of their time indoors (Klepeis et al. 2001), where levels can be 2-5 times more polluted than outdoors (Hulin, Simoni, Viegi, & AnnesiMaesano, 2012). The combination of both the length of time spent inside, and the potential for higher concentrations means that personal exposure is greater indoors rather than outdoors (Vardoulakis, 2009). However, to understand indoor air quality (IAQ), one must rely on the principle that the indoor atmosphere is an extension of the outdoor atmosphere. To understand environmental justice, one must have a holistic understanding of air pollution, indoors and outdoors.The aim of the research is to develop new understandings of patterns of exposure to poor air quality for school children. This will involve simultaneously monitoring multiple pollutants inside and outside using the NAQTS V1000 in a range of different places and indoor environments (schools and school buses) and with a fine temporal resolution. This will permit a holistic and more complex understanding of patterns of exposure for school children to be developed, including in terms of its implications for vulnerability and distributive justice.

AB - Environmental Justice research has focused on demonstrating the extent to which air pollution is equally—or unequally— distributed across particular defined social groups. A socioeconomic group of particular importance are children, as they are especially susceptible to air pollution because of their high inhalation rates relative to body mass, high activity concentrations, narrower lung airways, and immature immune systems (Lipsett, 1989; Pope, 1989;; Wiley et. al., 1991). More than just exhibiting negative health consequences, exposure to air pollution has also been associated with poor academic performance among schoolaged children (Mohai et al., 2011).Research has focused on outdoor air pollution, however, the conclusions drawn have a methodological myopia: the research assumes that outdoor air pollution is an accurate indicator of personal exposure. Yet, on average, people spend more than 90% of their time indoors (Klepeis et al. 2001), where levels can be 2-5 times more polluted than outdoors (Hulin, Simoni, Viegi, & AnnesiMaesano, 2012). The combination of both the length of time spent inside, and the potential for higher concentrations means that personal exposure is greater indoors rather than outdoors (Vardoulakis, 2009). However, to understand indoor air quality (IAQ), one must rely on the principle that the indoor atmosphere is an extension of the outdoor atmosphere. To understand environmental justice, one must have a holistic understanding of air pollution, indoors and outdoors.The aim of the research is to develop new understandings of patterns of exposure to poor air quality for school children. This will involve simultaneously monitoring multiple pollutants inside and outside using the NAQTS V1000 in a range of different places and indoor environments (schools and school buses) and with a fine temporal resolution. This will permit a holistic and more complex understanding of patterns of exposure for school children to be developed, including in terms of its implications for vulnerability and distributive justice.

M3 - Poster

T2 - ETH Zurich Combustion Generated Nanoparticles

Y2 - 18 June 2018 through 21 June 2018

ER -