Environmental Justice, Participatory Science & the “Spidey Sensor” with Dr. Valerie Ann Johnson | Bonus Episode
In this bonus episode of The Problem of Our Time, Colin Harden shares a full interview with Dr. Valerie Ann Johnson, a medical anthropologist, scholar-activist, and board member across multiple North Carolina commissions and advisory councils. Johnson explains how her interdisciplinary work connects preservation history, public humanities, environmental justice, and participatory sciences. She defines environmental justice through its origins in 1982 Warren County, North Carolina, describing the injustice of toxic dumping in deliberately marginalized Black communities, and highlights health impacts such as cancer risks and endocrine disruption. Johnson discusses demystifying science through community and citizen science, including NASA programs and projects led by the North Carolina Environmental Justice Network. She details the “Spidey Sensor” method, and describes community mapping and monitoring efforts to support organizing and policy advocacy against industrial waste, CAFOs, and landfills.
00:30 Meet Dr Valerie Johnson
02:56 Interdisciplinary Scholar Activism
07:43 Defining Environmental Justice
10:51 Health Impacts On Communities
13:59 What Is Participatory Science
19:56 Spidey Sensor Explained
24:43 Ways to Join Citizen Science
26:49 Mapping Hidden Poultry Farms
29:57 Data for Organizing and Policy
31:16 Rural Impacts and Environmental Injustice
34:40 Movement Then and Now
44:05 Afrofuturism and Imagining Justice
45:15 Hopeful Closing and Credits
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