Nuclear Waste

Nuclear Waste

Author: Steve H. Murdock

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2019-02-28

Total Pages: 344

ISBN-13: 0429705131

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Critical in solving the nuclear waste problem are such issues as the techniques needed to equitably select waste repository sites; the implications for economies, populations, public services, social structures, and future generations in siting areas; the best means for mitigating short- and long-term public and private impact of repositories; and the type of citizen involvement that best ensures the full participation of national, state, and local interest groups in the siting process. The contributors to this book examine these and related issues, offering the perspectives of sociology, economics, philosophy, and political science and representing the differing views of various regions of the nation.


Nuclear Waste

Nuclear Waste

Author: Steve H. Murdock

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2020-12-07

Total Pages: 344

ISBN-13: 9780367169398

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book examines the socioeconomic implications of nuclear waste management and repository siting primarily for rural areas in the United States. It helps to assess long-term development projects--energy, mining, water, and defense projects--occurring in rural areas.


Final Base Case Community Analysis

Final Base Case Community Analysis

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 1992

Total Pages: 130

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This document provides a base case description of the rural Clark County community of Indian Springs in anticipation of change associated with the proposed high-level nuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain. As the community closest to the proposed site, Indian Springs may be seen by site characterization workers, as well as workers associated with later repository phases, as a logical place to live. This report develops and updates information relating to a broad spectrum of socioeconomic variables, thereby providing a 'snapshot' or 'base case' look at Indian Springs in early 1992. With this as a background, future repository-related developments may be analytically separated from changes brought about by other factors, thus allowing for the assessment of the magnitude of local changes associated with the proposed repository. Given the size of the community, changes that may be considered small in an absolute sense may have relatively large impacts at the local level. Indian Springs is, in many respects, a unique community and a community of contrasts. An unincorporated town, it is a small yet important enclave of workers on large federal projects and home to employees of small- scale businesses and services. It is a rural community, but it is also close to the urbanized Las Vega Valley. It is a desert community, but has good water resources. It is on flat terrain, but it is located within 20 miles of the tallest mountains in Nevada. It is a town in which various interest groups diverge on issues of local importance, but in a sense of community remains an important feature of life. Finally, it has a sociodemographic history of both surface transience and underlying stability. If local land becomes available, Indian Springs has some room for growth but must first consider the historical effects of growth on the town and its desired direction for the future.


Social and Economic Aspects of Radioactive Waste Disposal

Social and Economic Aspects of Radioactive Waste Disposal

Author: Panel on Social and Economic Aspects of Radioactive Waste Management

Publisher:

Published: 1984-01-15

Total Pages: 196

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

To complement the growing body of knowledge on the physical aspects of radioactive waste disposal, this new report identifies the "socioeconomic and institutional" policy issues that must be addressed in implementing the Nuclear Waste Policy Act. Site location, transportation modes, disposal schedules, regulatory systems, and the effects of these systems on the people living near the sites and along the transportation routes are addressed.