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Title page
Contents
Executive Summary 4
Key finding #1: Underrepresented populations disproportionately live in rural areas, work in agriculture, and lack access to critical public goods and services 5
Key finding #2: Underrepresented populations are less exposed to ambient air and water pollution, but may be more impacted by these, possibly due to... 6
Key Finding #3: Underrepresented populations are more exposed to-and more impacted by-land degradation and deforestation 7
But there is an exception to the deforestation relationship in Latin America, where deforestation on Indigenous lands is lower than on non-Indigenous lands 8
Key finding #4: Underrepresented populations have fewer options and face starker trade-offs between economic opportunities and environmental quality 8
Breaking the cycle 9
Policy actions when authorities are favorable to change 9
Policy actions in adversarial environments 10
Chapter 1. Environment and inclusion 11
Exclusion and environmental degradation 14
The focus of this report 15
References 21
Chapter 2. Public services for underrepresented populations: from infrastructure to critical resources 25
At a glance 25
2.1. Access to public assets and services 26
2.2. The incidence of environmental disamenities 29
References 32
Chapter 3. Fissured landscapes and divided waters: uncovering social cleavages 36
At a glance 36
3.1. Exposure to deforestation 37
3.2. Forest loss and cascading health impacts 40
3.3. Exposure to land degradation 43
3.4. Productivity losses and health impacts of poor soils 48
3.5. Gender dimensions 50
3.6. The way forward 52
References 53
Chapter 4. Disparities in Air Pollution 58
At a glance 58
4.1. Exposure to air pollution 58
4.2. Trade-offs between income and air quality 63
4.3. Consumption patterns and air pollution 65
The way forward 68
References 68
Chapter 5: Policy options for breaking the cycle of environmental degradation and social exclusion 71
At a glance 71
5.1. Inclusive policies and environmental policies are not always well-aligned 72
5.2. When objectives are shared: working within the system to empower marginalized communities 75
5.3. When objectives differ: best-feasible policy approaches 79
Public Engagement 80
Coalition Building 81
5.4. The way forward 83
References 83
Annex I: Maximizing overall welfare - A policy bundle 86
Annex II: Bridging gaps - A comparative framework for examining the welfare gap 88
Figure 1.1. Population shares at risk of underrepresentation by country income levels 17
Figure 2.1. Access to basic public services at the household level, by representation status 27
Figure 2.2. Estimated coefficients of public good access versus underrepresentation risk, over gross domestic product (GDP) quartiles 29
Figure 2.3. Exposure to land, air, and water degradation, by representation status 30
Figure 2.4. Agricultural employment and urbanization rates by, representation status 31
Figure 3.1. Social exclusion, Indigenous populations, and deforestation 38
Figure 3.2. Access to piped water, by exclusion status and household income 41
Figure 3.3. Global loss of net primary productivity in the degrading areas between 1981 and 2021 45
Figure 3.4. Vulnerability to sexual attacks when fetching water: underrepresented v non-underrepresented women 51
Figure 4.1. Global population-weighted exposure to PM2.5 air pollution relative to the year 2000 59
Figure 4.2. Exposure to PM2.5 concentrations (ug/m3) by country income group 60
Figure 4.3. Differential exposure to hazardous PM2.5 based on relative wealth and underrepresentation risk 60
Figure 4.4. Wealth effects of mining on households 65
Figure 4.5. Household budget share of energy type (high v low-polluting), by country income group 66
Figure 4.6. EECs for cooking fuels by representation-status 67
Figure 4.7. EECs for motorcycle ownership for underrepresented and non-underrepresented groups 67
Figure 5.1. A policy matrix for examining the welfare gap 74
Boxes
Box 1.1. Approaches for measuring ethnic diversity 13
Box 1.2. What are the benefits of inclusive decision-making? 15
Box 1.3. How is the URRI built? 18
Box 3.1. Gentle resistance: the bottom-up Chipko movement 39
Box 3.2. Estimating unequal health impacts from forest loss due to waterborne diseases 40
Box 3.3. Causal analysis of the deforestation linkages with malaria transmission 42
Box 3.4. Dependency on forests in Nepal is mediated by consumption expenditures 44
Box 3.5. The evolution of measuring land degradation 46
Box 3.6. Underrepresentation risk and the determinants of land degradation methodology 47
Box 3.7. Zinc deficiency in soil and health impacts on underrepresented populations 49
Box 4.1. Prioritizing access to economic opportunities over environmental health: evidence from Santiago 61
Box 4.2. The impact of household air pollution on women and children 62
Box 4.3. Mining as a contributor to local air pollution 63
Box 4.4. Environmental Engel curves 65
Box 5.1. Tinbergen's Rule - Aligning policy instruments to achieve multiple targets 73
Box 5.2. Integrated Conservation and Development Projects 75
Box 5.3. The promise and perils of decentralization 76
Box 5.4. Water, women, and the importance of voice in decision-making 77
Box 5.5. The World Bank's Environmental and Social Framework 79
Box 5.6. African Parks - a model for sustainable growth in low-capacity environment 81
Box Figures
Figure B1.3.1. Correlations between URRI and other socioeconomic measures 20
Figure B3.3.1. Soybean crop growth and trends in an Amazonian country, 2001-23 43
Figure B3.4.1. Access to public forests and private trees, by consumption quintiles 44
Figure B3.4.2/Figure B3.4.12. Perceived value of NTFPs, compared to annual expenditure on food purchased and annual total consumption expenditure 44
Figure B4.4.1/Figure B4.4.2. Block-level population shares in Santiago for immigrant (left) and Indigenous (right) households 61
Figure B4.4.2/Figure B4.4.3. Historical street map of Santiago around 1920 (left) and in 2022 (right) 62
Figure B4.3.1. Effect of mine opening on air pollution measured via mean AOD 64
Figure B4.4.1. Stylized EEC relationships for normal and inferior goods 65
Annex Figures
Figure A.5.1. A policy bundle with no externalities 86
Figure A.5.2. Economic and environmental policies with externalities 87
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