01154nam0-22003851i-450-99000679908040332120131128190149.0000679908FED01000679908(Aleph)000679908FED0100067990820131128d1994----km-y0itay50------baitaITy-------001yy<<Il >>potere governativo di nominaGiuliana PaganettoNapoliJovene1994VIII, 148 p.24 cmPubblicazioni della Facoltà di giurisprudenzaUniversità di CagliariSerie 1Giuridica44Funzionari stataliNominaEnti pubbliciDirigentiNomina342.450 68Paganetto,Giuliana231522ITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK990006799080403321UNIV. 143 (44)23893FSPBCI F 24030013*FGBCUNIV. 156 1 (44)26789*FGBCXXVIII 219230DDCICFSPBCFGBCDDCICPotere governativo di nomina633683UNINA03310nam 22005173 450 991102873590332120250905080656.01-83695-188-41-83695-189-2(MiAaPQ)EBC31947367(Au-PeEL)EBL31947367(CKB)40874992500041(OCoLC)1535405955(EXLCZ)994087499250004120250905d2025 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierFood Beyond Terroir Tasting Place and Placing Taste in Global Perspective1st ed.New York, NY :Berghahn Books, Incorporated,2025.©2025.1 online resource (336 pages)Food, Nutrition, and Culture Series ;v.91-83695-187-6 Part 1. LANDS. Terroir in contested territories -- Beating the bounds of terroir: A perambulation of the micro and macro cultures of cidermaking in Devon, England -- Fishnets: Land-sea relationalities and contingencies in Coastal Latvian "Taste of Place" -- On being placeless? The case of vegan cheeses -- What's mine Is mine and what's yours Is mine: The terroirism of Nash in Russian culinary colonialism -- Part 2. LAWS. The Domaće relations of cured pork: "Homemade" resistance to terroir products in Croatian Istria -- From terroir to viticultural bricolages: Facing environmental challenges in Burgundy -- Food producers and place brands in contemporary Japan -- Shifting wind, eternal earth: Lapsang Souchong, a foreign Fengtu comes home -- Part 3. BODIES. Domestic cooks' work toward Moroccan Beldi foods in uncertain times -- Culinary Mestizaje: On the making of an authentic Cuban taste of place -- Food, place, and personhood in South India: The limits of terroir -- To chop means to eat: The cosmology of taste in Ghanaian foodways -- Part 4. IMAGINARIES. Terroir in future tense? Gender, taste, and emplacement in an age of borders -- British-born Chinese restaurateurs and the reinvention of Chinese cuisine -- "Good Wine" (Dobro Vino) and the social imaginary of place: Wine quality debates in the Bulgarian wine industry -- Intimacy at scale: Sovereignty as political temporality -- Afterword: Thinking, and becoming, beyond terroir.Through diverse ethnographic case studies, leading food scholars examine the meaning and making of place and taste. In doing so, the book challenges unsettling terroir-inspired notions of a fixed taste of place and pushes the boundaries of what we think we know about their connections.Food, Nutrition, and Culture SeriesFoodhttp://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85050184Terroirhttp://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2007007885Nutritional anthropologyhttp://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh91001556FoodTerroirNutritional anthropology394.1/2Colquhoun Anna1849397Graf Katharina1849398MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911028735903321Food Beyond Terroir4438795UNINA08156nam 2200661Ia 450 991096412920332120251116160635.09786610185085978030917088803091708859781280185083128018508297803095676400309567645(CKB)111069351121088(OCoLC)70731102(CaPaEBR)ebrary10068464(SSID)ssj0000140006(PQKBManifestationID)11911764(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000140006(PQKBWorkID)10030042(PQKB)11257855(MiAaPQ)EBC3377224(Perlego)4735106(BIP)7240047(EXLCZ)9911106935112108820030626d2001 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtccrDisposition of high-level waste and spent nuclear fuel the continuing societal and technical challenges /Committee on Disposition of High-Level Radioactive Waste Through Geological Isolation, Board on Radioactive Waste Management, Division on Earth and Life Studies, National Research Council1st ed.Washington, D.C. ;[Great Britain] National Academy Pressc20011 online resource (214 p.) Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph9780309073172 0309073170 Includes bibliographical references.DISPOSITION OF HIGH-LEVEL WASTE AND SPENT NUCLEAR FUEL -- Acknowledgments -- Preface -- Contents -- Executive Summary -- PRINCIPAL FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS -- PRINCIPAL RECOMMENDATIONS -- 1 Disposition of High-Level Waste and Spent Nuclear Fuel: An Overview of the Societal and Technical Challenges -- QUESTIONS TO BE ADDRESSED IN THIS REPORT -- How Can Safety Be Assured for HLW? -- How Can Safety and Security Against Human Actions Be Assured for HLW? -- What Are the Inherent Limits to Assuring Safety and Security by Geological Repositories or by Surface Storage? -- Why Has There Not Been More Progress Toward Geological Disposal? -- Are There Available Alternatives to Geological Disposition or Surface Storage? -- Do National Programs Have to Choose Now Between Geological Repositories and Surface Storage? -- Are New Initiatives Needed in International Cooperation? -- 2 Principal Findings and Conclusions -- TODAY'S GROWING INVENTORY OF HLW REQUIRES ATTENTION BY NATIONAL DECISION MAKERS -- THE FEASIBLE OPTIONS ARE MONITORED STORAGE ON OR NEAR THE EARTH'S SURFACE AND GEOLOGICAL DISPOSITION -- GEOLOGICAL DISPOSAL REMAINS THE ONLY LONG-TERM SOLUTION AVAILABLE -- GEOLOGICAL DISPOSAL IS SCIENTIFICALLY AND TECHNICALLY SOUND, BUT IMPORTANT CHALLENGES REMAIN -- THE BIGGEST CHALLENGES ARE SOCIETAL -- WHETHER, WHEN, AND HOW TO MOVE TOWARD GEOLOGICAL DISPOSAL ARE SOCIETAL DECISIONS FOR EACH COUNTRY -- A STEPWISE PROCESS IS APPROPRIATE FOR DECISION MAKING UNDER TECHNICAL AND SOCIETAL UNCERTAINTY -- SUCCESSFUL DECISION MAKING IS OPEN, TRANSPARENT, AND BROADLY PARTICIPATORY -- SUCCESSFUL PROGRAM MANAGEMENT IS FLEXIBLE AND ADAPTIVE -- INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION CAN HELP ACHIEVE NATIONAL SOLUTIONS -- 3 Principal Recommendations -- PRINCIPAL RECOMMENDATION 1 -- PRINCIPAL RECOMMENDATION 2 -- PRINCIPAL RECOMMENDATION 3 -- Technical Actions -- Societal Actions.Common Requirements -- PRINCIPAL RECOMMENDATION 4 -- PRINCIPAL RECOMMENDATION 5 -- CLOSING COMMENTS -- 4 National Programs -- INVENTORIES OF HIGH-LEVEL WASTE AND SPENT NUCLEAR FUEL -- EXAMPLES OF NATIONAL WASTE MANAGEMENT PROGRAMS -- Belgium -- Canada -- China -- Finland -- France -- Germany -- Japan -- Netherlands -- Russia -- Spain -- Sweden -- Switzerland -- United Kingdom -- United States -- CONCLUSIONS -- 5 Societal Issues in Radioactive Waste Management -- THE ROOTS OF CONCERN -- A LEGACY OF DISTRUST -- VALUE JUDGMENTS AND ETHICAL ISSUES -- Intragenerational Equity -- Intergenerational Equity -- DISCUSSION: TOWARD AN EQUITABLE SYNTHESIS -- CONCLUSIONS -- RECOMMENDATIONS -- 6 Scientific and Technical Issues in Radioactive Waste Management -- GEOLOGICAL DISPOSAL -- SCIENTIFIC BASIS FOR MODELING -- The Behavior of the Waste Package -- The Behavior of the Host Rock in the Immediate Vicinity of the Waste Package (the "Near-Field") -- Transport of Radionuclides from the Near-Field Environment -- PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT METHODOLOGY -- DISCUSSION: UNCERTAINTY AND CONFIDENCE BUILDING -- The Scientific and Technical Community -- The Regulators' Dilemma -- The Link Between Scientific and Societal Responsibility -- CONCLUSIONS -- Science, Technology, and Performance Assessment -- Confidence and Trust -- General Conclusions -- 7 Alternatives to Geological Disposition -- SURFACE STORAGE -- SOCIETY'S TWO AVAILABLE DISPOSITION OPTIONS: GEOLOGICAL REPOSITORIES AND SURFACE STORAGE FACILITIES -- ALTERNATIVES TO GEOLOGICAL REPOSITORIES AND SURFACE STORAGE -- Partitioning and Transmutation -- Extraterrestrial Disposal -- Geological Alternatives to Mined Repositories: Subseabed and Deep-Borehole Options -- CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS REGARDING ALTERNATIVES -- 8 Improving Decision Making and Implementation -- THE NEED FOR A CONSISTENT POLICY THAT ENDURES.IMPROVING POLICY DECISIONS AND MANAGEMENT IMPLEMENTATION -- SITING: A CRUCIAL ASPECT OF SOCIETAL DECISION MAKING -- Goals and Objectives -- Appropriate Outcomes -- Appropriate Process -- Sweden -- France -- Canada -- Belgium -- Finland -- Summary -- LEARNING WHILE DOING-AND KEEPING OPTIONS OPEN -- 9 International Cooperation -- RADIOACTIVE WASTE MANAGEMENT ISSUES TRANSCEND NATIONAL BOUNDARIES -- SHARING KNOWLEDGE, EXPERIENCE, AND COSTS BETWEEN COUNTRIES -- Waste Management Information Is Freely Available -- International Organizations Provide a Framework for Collaboration -- Joint Projects Are the Most Effective Vehicles for Collaboration -- The Role of Commercial Consulting as a Know-How Transfer Mechanism -- Some Problems Can Arise During Cooperation- But the Benefits Outweigh These -- COLLABORATION THROUGH USE OF COMMON WASTE MANAGEMENT FACILITIES -- Transboundary Shipments for Treatment or Storage of Wastes Are Difficult -- International Repositories-A Global Issue -- Long-Term Safety -- Nuclear Security -- Economic Issues -- Public Acceptability -- Political Issues -- CONCLUSIONS -- International Cooperation -- International Repositories -- References -- Appendix A Biographical Sketches of Committee Members -- Appendix B Workshop Program -- WORKSHOP FINAL AGENDA -- Appendix C List of Attendees -- Appendix D Acronyms.Focused attention by world leaders is needed to address the substantial challenges posed by disposal of spent nuclear fuel from reactors and high-level radioactive waste from processing such fuel. The biggest challenges in achieving safe and secure storage and permanent waste disposal are societal, although technical challenges remain. Disposition of radioactive wastes in a deep geological repository is a sound approach as long as it progresses through a stepwise decision-making process that takes advantage of technical advances, public participation, and international cooperation. Written for concerned citizens as well as policymakers, this book was sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and waste management organizations in eight other countries.Radioactive waste disposal in the groundRadioactive waste repositoriesRadioactive waste disposal in the ground.Radioactive waste repositories.621.4838National Research Council (U.S.) Committee on Disposition of High-Level Radioactive Waste Through Geological Isolation.National Research Council (U.S.) Board on Radioactive Waste Management.MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910964129203321Disposition of high-level waste and spent nuclear fuel4352224UNINA