DocumentCode
860039
Title
From Calamity Mesa to Boyertown, PA: Risk, radon, and regulation in cold war America
Author
Bales, Ellen
Author_Institution
Univ. of California, Berkeley, CA
Volume
27
Issue
3
fYear
2008
Firstpage
25
Lastpage
31
Abstract
In the boom uranium mining industry in the American Southwest during the postwar 1940s and 1950s, the first casualty was occupational safety. That lapse engendered a harsh legacy: roughly fifty percent of the miners developed lung cancer over the next ten to twenty years, an outcome to which their excessive exposure to the decay products of radon gas emitted by the uranium ore may have contributed. Several decades later, in the mid-1980s, radon returned to the realm of public health and public policy when the high levels of radon gas found in private homes in Pennsylvania and New Jersey set off an indoor radon scare and compelled the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to set radon standards for residential environments. This paper employs these two radon exposure crises as a heuristic for examining the multiplicity of social, economic, political, and cultural concerns that are mobilized around a scientifically-informed regulatory decision.
Keywords
environmental factors; hazardous areas; health hazards; occupational health; occupational safety; radioactive pollution; radon; uranium; American Southwest; Boyertown; Calamity Mesa; Environmental Protection Agency; New Jersey; Pennsylvania; Rn; U; cold war; indoor radon scare; lung cancer; occupational safety; public health; public policy; radon gas; radon standards; residential environments; uranium mining industry; uranium ore; Cancer; Cultural differences; Environmental economics; Lungs; Mining industry; Occupational safety; Ores; Protection; Public healthcare; Public policy;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Technology and Society Magazine, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0278-0097
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MTS.2008.929003
Filename
4623824
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