Data and Code for: What Caused Racial Disparities in Particulate Exposure to Fall? New Evidence from the Clean Air Act and Satellite-Based Measures of Air Quality
收藏ICPSR2023-01-01 更新2026-04-16 收录
下载链接:
https://www.openicpsr.org/openicpsr/project/156821/version/V1/view?path=/openicpsr/156821/fcr:versions/V1/replicationFiles/programs/0_readin_airPollutionDi.R&type=file
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资源简介:
Racial differences in exposure to ambient air pollution have declined significantly in the United States over the past 20 years. This project links administrative Census microdata to newly available, spatially contin- uous high resolution measures of ambient particulate pollution (PM2.5) to examine the underlying causes and consequences of differences in Black-White pollution exposures. We begin by decomposing differences in pollution exposure into components explained by observable population characteristics (e.g., income) versus those that remain unexplained. We then use quantile regression methods to show that a significant portion of the “unexplained” convergence in Black-White pollution exposure can be attributed to differ- ential impacts of the Clean Air Act (CAA) in African American and non-Hispanic White communities. Areas with larger Black populations saw greater CAA-related declines in PM2.5 exposure. We show that the CAA has been the single largest contributor to racial convergence in PM2.5 pollution exposure in the U.S. since 2000 accounting for over 60 percent of the reduction.
提供机构:
University of California-Berkeley; Princeton University; United States Census Bureau
创建时间:
2023-01-01



