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These are the daily thoughts of Susan Hadden. For five months she lay in bed, knowing time was short. They begin in November and continue into January, when she could no longer concentrate and type. They are personal and full of love and hope. They end with two words: LOVE JESUS!
In 1986, after the disastrous accident at the Union Carbide plant in Bhopal, Congress passed the Emergency Planning and Community Right-To-Know Act. Under this act, many business facilities became subject to new reporting requirements with respect to the presence of hazardous substances. Hadden, an associate professor at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, conducted surveys relating to this act.
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Outlines the requirements and availability of data on chemical releases including descriptions of real life scenarios. This information is meant to be used for community emergency planning purposes. Discusses SARA, which put requirements on businesses to handle chemicals safely and to report the presence of large amounts of chemicals at their site. Also includes: what is risk?; glossary of terms; references and sources; and list of extremely hazardous substances. Ideal for public education and information.
This is a collection of papers presented at the 1985 annual meeting of the Society for Risk Analysis. As always seems to occur at these meetings, the discussion was lively, the sessions were filled, and people complained about not being able to hear all the papers they wanted to because of concurrent sessions. If ever someone is in charge of a meeting, I wish them the good luck to have it be one for the Society for Risk Analysis. While I was responsible for the meeting, it could not have taken place without the efforts of the general chairman, Alan Moshissi. The program committee was chaired by Janice Longstreth, and included Lee Abramson and Vincent Covello. Together we assembled disparate ...
Selected by Choice magazine as an Outstanding Academic Title The 1984 lethal gas leak at the Union Carbide pesticide plant in Bhopal, India, may be the most extensively studied industrial disaster in history. In a departure from earlier studies that have focused primarily on the causes of the catastrophe, Sheila Jasanoff and the contributors to this volume critically examine the consequences of the accident.