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86 Tex. L. Rev. 1493 (2007-2008)
Harnessing the Power of Information through Community Monitoring: Insights from Social Science

handle is hein.journals/tlr86 and id is 1509 raw text is: Harnessing the Power of Information Through
Community Monitoring: Insights from Social
Science
Christine Overdevest* & Brian Mayer
I.  Introduction
Industrial and other polluters in the United States release enough
hazardous pollution into the air to place over 92% of the U.S. population at
an increased risk of developing respiratory disease, while 17% of the
population is at an even higher risk of toxic respiratory exposures.1 Federal
monitoring of hazardous or toxic air pollutants occurs under the Clean Air
Act (CAA); however, the monitors used to create regional estimates of air
quality are limited in number and provide only rough estimates over large
areas.2 This level of resolution does not inform communities living near
industrial emitters of hazards in their neighborhoods.
Lack of site-specific information hampers individuals and nongovern-
mental organizations' (NGOs) ability to understand the risks they face from
industrial activity.  This asymmetry in information between firms and
community groups decreases the likelihood of social mobilization and limits
communities' ability   to  motivate  stricter  enforcement.    However,
environmental law has paid insufficient attention to the important role of
information and the effect that information asymmetry has on citizens' and
NGOs' framing of environmental problems, their mobilization of resources,
and their capacity to demand accountability from regulators and polluting
firms.
In this Article, we observe that several local antitoxic organizations
have realized the importance of collecting and diffusing site-specific
information for influencing the responsiveness and accountability of firms
and regulators. By incorporating the production of self-collected monitoring
data as part of their tactical repertoire, or store of strategic tactics, these
grassroots organizations seek to overcome-and in the process point us
toward-the limits of the current federal air-quality regulatory regime. In
better understanding this development of civil-society strategies to collect
and disseminate these groups' own environmental-monitoring information,
* Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of Florida.
** Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of Florida.
1. EPA, NATIONAL-SCALE AIR TOXiCS ASSESSMENT (1999), http://www.epa.gov/ttn/atw/nata
1999/natafinalfact.html (last updated Nov. 6, 2007).
2. See Dara O'Rourke & Gregg P. Macey, Community Environmental Policing: Assessing New
Strategies of Public Participation in Environmental Regulation, 22 J. POL'Y ANALYSIS & MGMT.
383, 384 (2003) (discussing the limitations of current air-quality-monitoring systems).

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