In Whose Backyard, Whose Risk, environmental lawyer, professor, and commentator Michael B. Gerrard tackles the thorny issue of how and where to dispose of hazardous and radioactive waste. Gerrard, who has represented dozens of municipalities and community groups that have fought landfills and incinerators, as well as companies seeking permits, clearly and succinctly analyzes a problem that has generated a tremendous amount of political conflict, emotional anguish, and transaction costs. He proposes a new system of waste disposal that involves local control, state responsibility, and national allocation to deal comprehensively with multiple waste streams. Gerrard draws on the literature of law, economics, political science, and other discipl...
Hazardous wastes are a by-product of the technological age in which we live. Until recently, disposi...
Building regionally necessary but locally noxious facilities such as power plants, landfills, waste ...
The Low-Level Radioactive Waste Policy Act (LLRWPA) of 1980 represents the first attempt by Congress...
In Whose Backyard, Whose Risk, environmental lawyer, professor, and commentator Michael B. Gerrard t...
The siting of hazardous and nuclear waste facilities has proven to be a task of enormous difficulty ...
This chapter is about locally-unwanted land uses, specifically hazardous waste treatment facilities....
Shrader-Frechette looks at current U.S. government policy regarding the nation's high-level radioact...
Abstract. Local community opposition constitutes the single greatest hurdle to the siting of hazardo...
The symposium editors note that, while there is no recipe for successful siting, some of the critica...
This study explores the dilemma associated with high-level waste disposal, first by recounting the h...
The environmental justice movement has seen some successes. After years of neglect, the federal gov...
Every year, commercial and governmental sources in the United States generate approximately 1.4 mill...
There is a place that today\u27s industrial society desperately wishes to find. In prior eras, peopl...
Abstract – Current plans and policies for the disposal of nuclear waste have been predicated on the ...
Proponents of hazardous and nuclear waste depositories label opponents to local siting of such facil...
Hazardous wastes are a by-product of the technological age in which we live. Until recently, disposi...
Building regionally necessary but locally noxious facilities such as power plants, landfills, waste ...
The Low-Level Radioactive Waste Policy Act (LLRWPA) of 1980 represents the first attempt by Congress...
In Whose Backyard, Whose Risk, environmental lawyer, professor, and commentator Michael B. Gerrard t...
The siting of hazardous and nuclear waste facilities has proven to be a task of enormous difficulty ...
This chapter is about locally-unwanted land uses, specifically hazardous waste treatment facilities....
Shrader-Frechette looks at current U.S. government policy regarding the nation's high-level radioact...
Abstract. Local community opposition constitutes the single greatest hurdle to the siting of hazardo...
The symposium editors note that, while there is no recipe for successful siting, some of the critica...
This study explores the dilemma associated with high-level waste disposal, first by recounting the h...
The environmental justice movement has seen some successes. After years of neglect, the federal gov...
Every year, commercial and governmental sources in the United States generate approximately 1.4 mill...
There is a place that today\u27s industrial society desperately wishes to find. In prior eras, peopl...
Abstract – Current plans and policies for the disposal of nuclear waste have been predicated on the ...
Proponents of hazardous and nuclear waste depositories label opponents to local siting of such facil...
Hazardous wastes are a by-product of the technological age in which we live. Until recently, disposi...
Building regionally necessary but locally noxious facilities such as power plants, landfills, waste ...
The Low-Level Radioactive Waste Policy Act (LLRWPA) of 1980 represents the first attempt by Congress...