Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Intersectional Burden Analysis

A framework examining how environmental burdens compound across overlapping identities—race, gender, class, disability, immigration status—requiring complex rather than singular solutions.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's identity intersected multiple marginalities: woman, intellectual, quasi-Indigenous (of mixed heritage), colonial subject. Environmental burden similarly concentrates on those navigating intersecting inequalities. A Latinx immigrant woman with asthma in an industrial neighborhood experiences environmental injustice differently than a wealthy man in the same zip code. Intersectional analysis rejects treating environmental burden as uniform—it accounts for how racism, sexism, ableism, xenophobia, and economic exploitation compound environmental harm. This framework asks: whose bodies bear multiple environmental exposures? Who lacks political power to refuse contamination? How do gendered care responsibilities amplify environmental burden? Applied practice: environmental justice assessments mapping intersecting vulnerabilities, policy solutions addressing compound marginalities rather than single issues, leadership from those most burdened (often women and people of color), and recognition that environmental justice requires simultaneous racial, gender, economic, and disability justice work.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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