Fifty Years of Peeling Away the Lead Paint Problem: Saving Our Children's Future with Healthy Housing documents the history of childhood lead poisoning from paint between 1970 and 2022. Tracing the failure of the medical model (treatment after exposure) that marked the 1970s and 1980s and its replacement with a prevention housing-focused effort, the book documents the changes in health, housing and environmental science and policy. It is the first book to examine how the lead poisoning law in the U.S. was passed in 1992 and later implemented, with implications for the future, in particular, the emergence of a healthy housing movement.
The book describes the roles played by Congress, various administrations, agencies, local governments, the private sector, researchers, and a popular citizen's movement, especially parents. The role of the courts is discussed, including a controversial lead paint case on research ethics in Baltimore through an environmental justice lens. This book is the first to examine another recent case in California, where ten local jurisdictions established a precedent by successfully suing the lead paint industry to help pay for abatement.
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Table of Contents
PART 1. Paralysis and the Abject Failure to Address Lead Paint Before 1985 1. Banning Lead Paint: The Missed Opportunity 2. Early Failures and the Seeds of Success
PART 2. Breaking the Barriers to Progress (1986-2001) 3. Solutions Take Shape: The Lead Paint Title X Law 4. Growing Pains: New Regulations, Enforcement, Local Capacity and Proof Emerge 5. The Nation Acts: Community Organizing, a 10-Year Solution from the President's Cabinet, and Political Sabotage 6. Research Ethics and The Grimes Court Case
PART 3. The New Consensus (2001-2020) 7. If You Make a Mess, You Have to Clean It Up: The Rhode Island and California Court Decisions 8. The US and International Healthy Homes Movement 9. Reframing Health, Environment and Housing 10. Conclusion: The Triumph of Science and Citizen Action over Policy Paralysis