03836nam 22006495 450 991045617650332120210624011618.01-282-35595-397866123559500-520-92048-110.1525/9780520920484(CKB)111063898765108(EBL)470813(OCoLC)609849881(SSID)ssj0000349188(PQKBManifestationID)11272976(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000349188(PQKBWorkID)10348620(PQKB)11779185(DE-B1597)518949(DE-B1597)9780520920484(MiAaPQ)EBC470813(EXLCZ)9911106389876510820200424h19971997 fg 0engurnn#---|u||utxtccrNo Safe Place Toxic Waste, Leukemia, and Community Action /Phil Brown, Edwin J. MikkelsenBerkeley, CA :University of California Press,[1997]©19971 online resource (289 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-520-21248-7 Front matter --Contents --List of Tables and Maps --Foreword --Preface (1997) --Preface (1990) --Acknowledgments --Introduction --1. Town in Turmoil: History and Significance of the Woburn Cluster --2. The Formation of an Organized Community --3. The Sickness Caused by "Corporate America": Effects of the Woburn Cluster --4. Taking Control: Popular Epidemiology --5. Making It Safe: Securing Future Health --Notes --Bibliography --IndexToxic waste, contaminated water, cancer clusters-these phrases suggest deception and irresponsibility. But more significantly, they are watchwords for a growing struggle between communities, corporations, and government. In No Safe Place, sociologists, public policy professionals, and activists will learn how residents of Woburn, Massachusetts discovered a childhood leukemia cluster and eventually sued two corporate giants. Their story gives rise to questions important to any concerned citizen: What kind of government regulatory action can control pollution? Just how effective can the recent upsurge of popular participation in science and technology be? Phil Brown, a medical sociologist, and Edwin Mikkelsen, psychiatric consultant to the plaintiffs, look at the Woburn experience in light of similar cases, such as Love Canal, in order to show that toxic waste contamination reveals fundamental flaws in the corporate, governmental, and scientific spheres. The authors strike a humane, constructive note amidst chilling odds, advocating extensive lay involvement based on the Woburn model of civic action. Finally, they propose a safe policy for toxic wastes and governmental/corporate responsibility. Woburn, the authors predict, will become a code word for environmental struggles.Hazardous wastesEnvironmental aspectsMassachusettsWoburnLeukemiaMassachusettsLeukemia in childrenMassachusettsWoburnLeukemia in childrenElectronic books.Hazardous wastesEnvironmental aspectsMassachusettsWoburn.LeukemiaMassachusetts.Leukemia in childrenMassachusettsWoburn.Leukemia in children.363.72875809744618.92618.9299419Brown Philauthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut928865Mikkelsen Edwin J.authttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/autDE-B1597DE-B1597BOOK9910456176503321No Safe Place2469122UNINA