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2026 AAHM + AAHN Annual Meeting
Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
This roundtable explores the intersection between environmental justice and histories of health and medicine. The environmental justice movement emerged from protest cultures of the late 1980s, culminating in the 1991 First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit in Washington DC, and codified within the EPA in 1994.  While “environmental justice” as an actors’ term is both relatively recent and US-focused, it also serves as an analytic category, enabling an exploration of health, place, and dispossession across broader geographies and temporalities.  By highlighting the intersections of toxic risks and marginalization along economic, ethnic, and racial lines, environmental justice redefined environmentalism to address differential impacts.   Historians of health and medicine have something unique to offer and to learn from close engagement with environmental justice: as a historical moment, as a mode of historical analysis, and as a mode of engaged history.  Merlin Chowkwanyun will speak on how new methodologies and data allow us to broaden our notions of "environmental justice" and to interrogate the legal history that has largely been narrated -- sometimes accurately, sometimes less so -- by EJ activists themselves.   Matt Klingle will take a broader history of environmental justice as the entwined changes to planetary, bodily and social metabolisms from the late 19th century to the present day, with particular focus on diabetes in relation to rural and indigenous healfh.  Jason Chernesky will explore how 1980s healthcare workers, particularly pediatric nurses during the HIV-AIDS crisis, understood environmental inequalities and shaped ecologies of care in marginalized populations in American cities. Rick Mizelle and Harriet Washington use lead poisoning to situate case studies of environmental racism. In Mizelle’s story, EJ becomes an analyst’s category, following lead toxicity from the Civil Rights era to the Flint and Jackson Water Crises.   Washington in turn examines how efforts to address environmental racism in the form of lead poisoning in communities of color, have repeatedly been undermined by the medicalization of diagnoses like pica, which putatively led children of color to ingest lead-paint flakes in heavy-metal-imbued housing. Jeremy Greene will highlight intertwined methods of history as advocacy in communities facing health harms from medical incinerators. 

Chair email: [email protected]

Learning Outcomes
  • Understand the history of environmental justice as inextricably linked to the history of health and medicine
  • Explore the intersection and divergences between

The Roosevelt Room is on the 2nd Floor of the Genesee Building.

From the guest elevators on the Lobby Level: Turn left before reaching the main staircase. Continue left through the Genesee Building façade toward the Fitness Center. Take either the elevator or the spiral staircase to the 2nd Floor.

The Roosevelt Room is located above the Citizens Banks Freestanding directional signs will be posted throughout the route.
Moderators
JG

Jeremy Greene

Johns Hopkins University
Speakers
MC

Merlin Chowkwanyun

Columbia University
MK

Matt Klingle

Bowdoin College

avatar for Jason Chernesky

Jason Chernesky

CLIR Postdocoral Fellow, Food and Drug Administration History Office
RM

Richard Mizelle

University of Houston
HW

Harriet Washington

Columbia University

Friday June 5, 2026 12:30pm - 2:00pm EDT
Roosevelt Room

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