Ten questions concerning the future of residential indoor air quality and its environmental justice implications

Booker, D. and Petrou, G. and Chatzidiakou, L. and Das, D. and Farooq, F. and Ferguson, L. and Jutila, OE.I. and Milczewska, K. and Modlich, M. and Rangel, A. Moreno and Thakrar, S.K. and Yeoman, A.M. and Davies, M. and Mead, M.I. and Miller, M.R. and Wild, O. and Shi, Zongbo and Mavrogianni, A. and Doherty, R. M. (2025) Ten questions concerning the future of residential indoor air quality and its environmental justice implications. Building and Environment: 112957. ISSN 0360-1323 (In Press)

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Abstract

Humans spend a large proportion of their time at home, where exposure to poor indoor air quality has detrimental – and often inequitably distributed – impacts on health and wellbeing. Unprecedented changes to residential indoor environments are expected in the coming decades, especially in order to meet net zero energy and greenhouse gas emissions targets. However, it is unclear how these changes will affect indoor air quality, and to what extent they will differentially impact different social groups. In this paper, we pose and address ten questions concerning the future of residential indoor air quality and its environmental justice implications. We pay attention to environmental justice in relation to indoor air quality, including distributive, procedural, recognition, capabilities, and epistemic dimensions. The ten questions specifically address: social gradients in health and exposure, and how changes in climate, policies, behaviours, technologies, populations, and demographics might affect residential indoor air quality and environmental justice. We also highlight the role that transdisciplinary research can play in improving residential indoor air quality in a more environmentally just way.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Building and Environment
Uncontrolled Keywords:
Research Output Funding/yes_externally_funded
Subjects:
?? indoor air qualityenvironmental justicehousingresidentialinequalityclimate changeyes - externally fundedbuilding and constructioncivil and structural engineeringenvironmental engineeringgeography, planning and developmentsdg 3 - good health and well-being ??
ID Code:
228617
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
02 Apr 2025 11:10
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
In Press
Last Modified:
03 Apr 2025 02:35