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EJ Screening Index (EJScreen-Style)/Evidence
Method evidence record

EJ Screening Index (EJScreen-Style)

An EJ screening index is a composite indicator that combines an environmental burden measure with a demographic vulnerability measure to flag communities that experience both high pollution and concentrations of low-income residents and people of color. The canonical implementation is the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's EJScreen tool, whose technical documentation specifies how each environmental indicator is paired with a demographic index and converted into a nationwide percentile. The method is deliberately a screening device rather than a definitive measure: it is meant to surface places that warrant a closer look, not to settle exposure or causation. Each EJ index multiplies an environmental indicator by the gap between local and national demographic disadvantage, so that both high pollution and high vulnerability are required to score highly. Percentile ranking then makes otherwise incommensurable indicators comparable across the country. The result is a transparent, reproducible map of potential environmental justice concern.

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Environmental Justice Screening Composite Index (EJScreen-Style Percentile Index)
Taxonomic method record · mcdm / environmental-sociology
  • U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (2024). EJScreen Technical Documentation for Version 2.3. Washington, DC: U.S. EPA. · URL
  • Mohai, P., & Saha, R. (2006). Reassessing Racial and Socioeconomic Disparities in Environmental Justice Research. Demography, 43(2), 383-399. · DOI 10.1353/dem.2006.0017
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Related methods

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Same method familyClimate Vulnerability Indexmachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.Used in the same domainEnvironmental Justice Spatial Analysismachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.Same method familyLivelihood Vulnerability Indexmachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.Used in the same domainToxic Release Inventory Analysismachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.

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Sources

2 recorded citations, copied from the method source record.

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