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11 Ariz. J. Env't L. & Pol'y 267 (2020-2021)
Cruel, Unusual, and Toxic: The Environmental Implications of Mass Incarceration in the United States

handle is hein.journals/arijel11 and id is 267 raw text is: ARIZONA JOURNAL
OF
ENVIRONMENTAL LAW & POLICY

VOLUME 11             SUMMER 2021                ISSUE 3
CRUEL, UNUSUAL, AND TOXIC:
THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPLICATIONS OF MASS INCARCERATION IN THE UNITED STATES
Melissa Mitchell (Zeid)*
This note examines the environmental issues associated with mass incarceration. It will
first discuss mass incarceration and environmental injustices generally. Then it will assert that,
due to the increased demand for prison facilities, mass incarceration led to an era of building
prisons on the cheapest, easiest to obtain sites: toxic waste sites and environmentally compromised
locations across the country. It will examine the statistics and recent studies from organizations
working to improve prison conditions. This note will assert that mass incarceration is, in its own
way, a form of environmental injustice that may even be subject to Eighth Amendment constraints.
To support this conclusion, it will first highlight the statistics on prisoners who have experienced
health issues as a result of environmentally unsafe conditions. During this discussion, it will
question Eighth Amendment implications; namely, whether asbestos, arsenic, and other toxic
chemical exposure constitutes cruel and unusual punishment. Next, it will examine the
communities surrounding prisons and discuss how existing case law does not require prisons to
conduct an environmental impact study prior to the construction of a prison. It will highlight the
vast amount of pollution caused by prisons in recent years by examining specific prisons that have
contaminated their surroundings, specifically in low-income and rural areas. Finally, it will
discuss possible solutions to this problem and the difficulties in achieving those solutions.
I. Introduction                                                          268
II. A History of Mass Incarceration, Generally: A System of Injustice    269
III. Mass Incarceration, an Environmental Injustice                      271
A. Prisons Built on Toxic Sites                                       272
B. Prisons Built on Seemingly Benign Land                             274
* J.D. Candidate, University of Arizona James E. Rogers College of Law, Class of 2022. I would like to
thank Professor Joy Herr-Cardillo for your feedback, encouragement, and guidance while writing this note.
Thank you to the Arizona Journal of Environmental Law and Policy, especially the Executive Board, for
your feedback, edits, and for making the publication of this note possible. Endless thanks to my husband for
being my sounding board and encourager throughout this process-and for always challenging me to see the
people behind the story. Finally, thank you to my parents for your never-ending support and for teaching
me, through your words and actions, to listen to the voiceless and stand up in the face of injustice.

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