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220 GYULA NAGY on the context. Environmental injustices occur in the system of humans and nonhumans who mutually influence and shape each other(4), in different spatial and temporal scales (5). Participation and involvement (6) is fundamentally important for the elimination of an injustice. Instances of environmental injustice are phenomena that are not separable from the geographical space, and therefore the duality and synthesizing approach of the geographical science serves as an excellent framework for their research. Recommended readings Holifield, Ryan et al. 2017. The Routledge Handbook of Environmental Justice. London, Routledge. This handbook presents the research results of the past decades in environmental justice. It critically reviews the quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methodological approaches and employs an interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary approach, rather than a narrow regional focus. Nagy, Gyula 2021. Environmental justice and its geographical aspects in Hungary. Zér és Tarsadalom, 35/4: 76-103. doi: 10.17649/TET.35.4.3373. This study discusses in English the spatiality of Hungarian environmental injustices and the factors that contributed to their evolution in a post-socialist context. Carson, Rachel 1962. Silent spring. Houghton Mifflin. This book constitutes the foundation of thought on environmental justice. It describes in alucid and readable style the damages caused by pesticides to nature and its mediumand long-term consequences. References Bárdos, György 2005. A külső környezet tagozódása és főbb jellemzői [The subdivision and main characteristics of the external environment]. In Nánási, Irén (ed.): Humánökológia. Budapest, Medicina Kiadó, 438—442. Becchi, Paolo 2012. Our Responsibility Towards Future Generations. In Mathis, Klaus (ed.): Efficiency, Sustainability, and Justice to Future Generations. Dordrecht, Springer, 77-96. Beck, Ulrich 2003. A kockázat-társadalom. Út egy másik modernitásba IRisk society. Towards a new modernity]. Budapest, Századvég Politikai Iskola Alapítvány. Blacksell, Mark — Watkins, Charles — Economides, Kim 1986. Human Geography and Law: A Case of Separate Development in Social Science. Progress in Human Geography 10/3: 371-396. Blomley, Nicholas K. 1994. Law, space and the geographies of power. Progress in Human Geography, 20/1: 137-138. Boros, Lajos 2010. A globális gazdaság környezeti és társadalmi konfliktusai [Environmental and social conflicts of the global economy]. In Mészäros, Rezsô — Nagy, Gabor — Nagy, Erika — Boros, Lajos — Pál, Viktor (eds.): A globális gazdaság földrajzi dimenziói. Budapest, Akadémiai Kiadó, 276-306. Bosco, Fernando J. 2014. Actor-Network Theory, Networks, and Relational Geographies. In Aitken, Stuart C. — Valentine, Gill (eds.): Approaches to Human Geography: Philosophies, Theories, People and Practices. Los Angeles — London, SAGE Publication, 150-162.