Jill LindseyHarrison
- Professor of Geography
- Environmental Justice
- Environmental Politics
- Political Ecology
- Agriculture and Food Systems
- PhD, University of California at Santa Cruz, 2006
- HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
- ENVIRONMENT-SOCIETY

Research Interests
My research helps identifythe cultural relations and political economic processes that disproportionatelysituatemembers of racially marginalized, Indigenous, and working-classcommunities in dangerous spaces and precarious conditions thatcontribute toinequalities in life opportunity, illness, and death. I also identify ways thestate, social movements, and other institutions canmore effectively redressthose inequalities. I have done so through various cases of environmental andworkplace inequality in thecontemporary United States.
Currently, my research is focused on helping to create stronger public institutions that better support environmental justice (EJ). Notably, I study state and federal environmental regulatory agencies in the United States, and I am especially interested in how regulatory agency staff respond to critiques from anti-regulatory elites and EJ movements. I evaluate how environmental regulatory agencies’ practices affect overburdened and vulnerable communities, and I identify regulatory reforms that help state institutions better support those communities. I do so by bringing lessons from political ecology and science and technology studies (STS) into EJ studies. One of my current projects analyzes state-level cumulative impact laws and regulations and the conditions under which they help rectify shortcomings of conventional environmental assessment.
This is part of a broader research project examiningthe disappointing pace of environmental regulatory agencies’ “environmentaljustice”(EJ) programs and policies as a case through which to understandwhy, despite reducing environmental hazards for the nationoverall,agencies have not improved conditions in places enduring thegreatest environmental burdens. Other scholars have shown that materialfactors outside the control of agency staff – budget cuts, limits toregulatory authority, industry pressure, and underdeveloped analyticaltools – constrain the possibilities for EJ reforms to regulatory practice. Myresearch builds upon that work by demonstrating howagencies’ EJ reform efforts are also undermined by elements of regulatoryworkplace culture that transcend changesin administration.At the same time,my publicationsandoutreach offer practical suggestions for how agencies can more effectivelyreduce environmentalinequalities that deeply affect the lives of so manyAmericans, and they show how agencies’ EJ staff – those tasked with developingEJreforms – endeavor to change both regulatory practice and regulatory culturefrom the inside out. Youcan read about my research in articles in,TheColoradan, and.
I have advised U.S. government agencies on theirenvironmentaljustice reform efforts through serving on the National EnvironmentalJustice Advisory Council of theU.S. Environmental Protection Agency.I have been invited topresent my research on the challenges facing government agencies’ EJ reformefforts to the executiveleadership and other staff at numerous environmentalregulatory agencies, including atthe U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA),California EPA, theCalifornia Bay Area Air Quality Management District, the MinnesotaPollution Control Agency, Minnesota’s Environmental Quality Board,theCalifornia Fish and Game Commission, and the California Natural ResourcesAgency.
In another recent project, my colleagues and I identified cultural challenges facing universities’ efforts to address environmental precarity through “engineering-for-development” (EfD) programs that train engineering students to help solve problems in developing communities, including pertaining to shelter, drinking water access, sanitation, and affordable energy. I conducted this NSF-funded research in collaboration with Shawhin Roudbari (Environmental Design, University of Colorado), Jessica Kaminsky (Engineering, North Carolina State University), Santina Contreras (Public Policy, University of Southern California), and Skye Niles (University of Colorado).
My recent research has been supported by the National Science Foundation, the AmericanCouncil of Learned Societies, the American Philosophical Society, and theUniversityof Colorado.
I also co-founded and have helped direct ’sGraduate Certificate in Environmental Justice.
Recent Courses Taught
- Spring 2024 GEOG 3782 Environmentalism, Race, and Justice
- Fall 2023 GEOG 4772 The Geography of Food and Agriculture
- Spring 2023 GEOG 3782 Environmentalism, Race, and Justice
- Spring 2023 GEOG/COMM/ENVS/PSCI 7118 Environmental Justice
- Fall 2022 GEOG 4772 The Geography of Food and Agriculture
Selected Publications
- Harrison, Jill Lindsey, and Jonathan K. London. 2024. “Seeking Environmental Justice Through the State: Insider Allies in U.S. State and Federal Government Agencies.” Geoforum 155: 104098. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2024.104098
- Harrison, Jill Lindsey. 2023. “Environmental Justiceand the State.”Environment and Planning E: Nature and Space 6(4): 2740-2760.
- Malin,Stephanie A., David Ciplet, and Jill Lindsey Harrison. 2023. “Sites ofResistance, Acceptance, and Quiescence Amid Environmental Injustice: AnIntroduction to the Special Issue on Sustainability under Neoliberalism.”EnvironmentalJustice 16(1): 1-9.
- Harrison,Jill Lindsey, andMaya Gabriela-Auiler Contreras. 2023. “The SubtleProduction of Quiescence: Tracing the Neoliberalizationof EnvironmentalJustice Policy Implementation.”Environmental Justice 16(1): 10-18.
- Harrison,Jill Lindsey. 2019..Cambridge,MA:MIT Press. Received Honorable Mention for the 2020 Allan Schnaiberg Outstanding PublicationAward from the American Sociological Association’s Section on EnvironmentalSociology.
- London, Jonathan K., and Jill Lindsey Harrison.2021. “”Environmental Justice14(5): 338-344.
- Niles, Skye, Shawhin Roudbari,Santina Contreras, Jill Lindsey Harrison, and Jessica Kaminsky. 2020. “Resistingand AssistingSocial Engagement in Engineering Education.”Journal of Engineering Education109(3): 491-507.
- Contreras,Santina,Skye Niles, ShawhinRoudbari, Jill Harrison, and Jessica Kaminsky. 2020. “Bridging the Praxis ofHazards andDevelopment with Resilience: A Case Study of an EngineeringEducation Program.”International Journalof Disaster Risk Reduction42: 101347.
- Ciplet,David, and Jill Lindsey Harrison. 2020. “Transition Tensions: Mapping Conflictsin Movements for a Just and SustainableTransition.”Environmental Politics29 (3): 435-456.Finalist for 2020EnvironmentalPolitics’ Article of the Year Award.
- Dillon,Lindsey, Christopher Sellers, Vivian Underhill, Nicholas Shapiro, Jennifer LissOhayon, Marianne Sullivan, Phil Brown, JillHarrison, Sara Wylie, and the “EPAUnder Siege” Writing Group. 2018. “The EPA in the Early Trump Administration:Prelude toRegulatory Capture.”American Journalof Public Health108 (S2): S89-S94.
- Fredrickson, Leif,Christopher Sellers, Lindsey Dillon, Jennifer Liss Ohayon, NicholasShapiro, Marianne Sullivan, Stephen Bocking,PhilBrown, Vanessa de la Rosa, Jill Harrison, Sara Johns, KatherineKulik, Rebecca Lave, Michelle Murphy, Liza Piper, LaurenRichter and Sara Wylie. 2018. “History of U.S. Presidential Assaultson Modern Environmental Health Protection.”AmericanJournalof Public Health108 (S2): S95-S103.
- Harrison, Jill Lindsey. 2017. “’We Do Ecology,Not Sociology’: Interactions among Bureaucrats and the Undermining ofRegulatoryAgencies’ Environmental Justice Efforts.”EnvironmentalSociology3(3): 197-212.
- Harrison, Jill Lindsey. 2016. “Bureaucrats’Tacit Understandings and Social Movement Policy Implementation: Unpacking theDeviation of Agency Environmental Justice Programs from EJ MovementPriorities.”Social Problems63(4):534-553.
- Harrison, Jill Lindsey. 2015.“Coopted Environmental Justice? Activists’ Roles in Shaping EJ PolicyImplementation.”Environmental Sociology1(4): 241-255.Winner of the 2017 Allan Schnaiberg OutstandingPublication Award from the American SociologicalAssociation’s Section onEnvironmental Sociology.
- Harrison, Jill Lindsey, and Christy Getz. 2014.“Farm Size and Job Quality: Mixed-Methods Studies of Hired Farm Work inCalifornia and Wisconsin.”Agricultureand Human Values32(4): 617-634.
- Harrison, Jill Lindsey. 2014. “NeoliberalEnvironmental Justice: Mainstream Ideas of Justice in Political Conflict overAgricultural Pesticides in the United States.”EnvironmentalPolitics23(4):650-669.
- Harrison, JillLindsey, andSarah E. Lloyd. 2013.“New Jobs, New Workers, and New Inequalities: Explaining Employers’Roles inOccupational Segregation by Nativity and Race.”Social Problems60(3): 281-301.
- Harrison, Jill Lindsey, andSarah E. Lloyd. 2012. “Illegality at Work:Deportability and the Productive New Era ofImmigration Enforcement.”Antipode44(2): 365-385.
- Harrison,Jill Lindsey. 2011.“Parsing ‘Participation’ in Action Research: Navigating theChallenges of Lay Involvement inTechnically Complex Participatory Science Projects.”Society and Natural Resources24(7):702-716.
- Harrison, Jill Lindsey. 2011..Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Winner of the 2012 FredButtel Outstanding Scholarly Achievement Award, Rural Sociological Society, and Winner of the 2012Association of Humanist Sociology Book Award.
Updated January 2023