03547oam 2200493Mu 450 991079992970332120190828012347.00-429-55977-10-429-26475-50-429-55530-X(CKB)4100000009040107(MiAaPQ)EBC5850118(OCoLC)1112422743(OCoLC)1112382408(OCoLC)1112506021(OCoLC)1112885476(OCoLC-P)1112422743(FlBoTFG)9780429264757(Au-PeEL)EBL5850118(OCoLC)1112422743(EXLCZ)99410000000904010720190817d2019 uy 0engur|n|||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierEnvironmental Health and the U. S. Federal System[electronic resource] Sustainably Managing Health HazardsMilton Routledge20191 online resource (307 p.)Routledge studies in environment and healthDescription based upon print version of record.0-367-20995-0 Cover; Half Title; Series Page; Title; Copyright; Contents; Preface; 1 Federalism and environmental health; 2 The big picture: U.S. environmental priorities after 1970; 3 Fresh water quality and supply; 4 Fresh air quality: indoors and out; 5 Noise management; 6 Nuclear waste management; 7 Nanomaterials; 8 Global climate change; 9 Inequities, population control, and resource management; 10 Robots, artificial intelligence, and the future of work; 11 Epilogue: struggling for a sustainable future; IndexThis book explains how the U.S. federal system manages environmental health issues, with a unique focus on risk management and human health outcomes. Building on a generic approach for understanding human health risk, this book shows how federalism has evolved in response to environmental health problems, political and ideological variations in Washington D.C, as well as in-state and local governments. It examines laws, rules and regulations, showing how they stretch or fail to adapt to environmental health challenges. Emphasis is placed on human health and safety risk and how decisions have been influenced by environmental health information. The authors review different forms of federalism, and analyse how it has had to adapt to ever evolving environmental health hazards, such as global climate change, nanomaterials, nuclear waste, fresh air and water, as well as examining the impact of robotics and artificial intelligence on worker environmental health. They demonstrate the process for assessing hazard information and the process for federalism risk management, and subsequently arguing that human health and safety should receive greater attention. This book will be essential reading for students and scholars working on environmental health and environmental policy, particularly from a public health, and risk management viewpoint, in addition to practitioners and policymakers involved in environmental management and public policy.Routledge studies in environment and health.Environmental healthUnited StatesEnvironmental health362.19698Greenberg Michael R40789Schneider Dona1946-920657OCoLC-POCoLC-PBOOK9910799929703321Environmental Health and the U. S. Federal System3874874UNINA