Handbook for Environmental Risk Decision Making: Values, Perceptions, and EthicsC. Richard Cothern This handbook describes the broad aspects of risk management involving scientific policy judgment, uncertainty analysis, perception considerations, statistical insights, and strategic thinking. This book presents all the important concepts to enable the reader to "see the big picture." This ability is extremely important - it allows the decision ma |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 68
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... Scientists • Philosophers • Journalists • Theologians • Attorneys • Policy makers • Environmentalists • Regulators • To develop a model that describes how the participants think environmental risk decision making should be conducted ...
... Scientists • Philosophers • Journalists • Theologians • Attorneys • Policy makers • Environmentalists • Regulators • To develop a model that describes how the participants think environmental risk decision making should be conducted ...
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... scientist, Brownowski's comment, “Truth in science is like Everest, an ordering of the facts”, is a most important value. It is a conclusion of this line of thinking that we should unmask the use of values in environmental decisions and ...
... scientist, Brownowski's comment, “Truth in science is like Everest, an ordering of the facts”, is a most important value. It is a conclusion of this line of thinking that we should unmask the use of values in environmental decisions and ...
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... Scientist, Toxicology and Risk Assessment Paper Product Development and Paper Technology Divisions The Procter & Gamble Company Cincinnati, Ohio John Hartung Office of Policy Development U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development ...
... Scientist, Toxicology and Risk Assessment Paper Product Development and Paper Technology Divisions The Procter & Gamble Company Cincinnati, Ohio John Hartung Office of Policy Development U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development ...
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... scientist has to say. Too many have a romantic idea of how nature should work — they envision Bambi, Flipper, Smokey ... scientists decided that they could not agree concerning the relative rankings. It is the ethical structure of ...
... scientist has to say. Too many have a romantic idea of how nature should work — they envision Bambi, Flipper, Smokey ... scientists decided that they could not agree concerning the relative rankings. It is the ethical structure of ...
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... scientists belly up to the bar and contribute their own professional judgment, or others will make the decisions without the constraints of thermodynamics, evolution, or calculus. The fallback position is that economists and lawyers ...
... scientists belly up to the bar and contribute their own professional judgment, or others will make the decisions without the constraints of thermodynamics, evolution, or calculus. The fallback position is that economists and lawyers ...
Contents
Introduction to Issues in Environmental Risk Decision Making | |
Impact of Subjectivity on Objectivity | |
Rediscovering the Role of Public Health in Environmental Decision Making | |
Telling the Public the Facts or the Probable Facts About Risks | |
The Urgent Need to Integrate Ethical Considerations into Risk Assessment Procedures | |
Moral Values in Risk Decisions | |
Values and Comparative Risk Assessment | |
Combining Data on Value Judgments | |
Ethical Theory and the Demands of Sustainability | |
Value Judgments Involved in Verifying and Validating Risk Assessment Models | |
The Stewardship Ethic Resolving the Environmental Dilemma | |
Introduction to the Commentary Section | |
Origin and Development | |
Balancing Risks Costs and Benefits Fairly Across | |
Introduction to Quantitative Issues | |
Environmental Ethics and Human Values | |
Index | |
Other editions - View all
Handbook for Environmental Risk Decision Making: Values, Perceptions and Ethics C. Richard Cothern No preview available - 1995 |
Handbook for Environmental Risk Decision Making: Values, Perceptions, and Ethics C. Richard Cothern No preview available - 2019 |
Common terms and phrases
acceptable affirming the consequent Aldo Leopold anthropocentric approach areas argue assessors assumptions benefits biocentric cancer carcinogen chemical comparative risk concept concern contaminated costs decision maker discount ecological economic ecosystem effects environment Environmental Ethics environmental risk decision Environmentalists estimates evaluation example exposure future Global Bioethics hazard human ignorance impacts important individual integrity intergenerational equity involved issues justice land ethic Leopold moral values nature normative Norton Nuclear Waste perceptions Philosophy political pollution possible precautionary principle present principle priorities programs public health questions rationality reasons Reducing regulatory responsibility risk analysis risk assessment risk management risk-based Sand County Almanac scale scientific scientists Shrader-Frechette social society species stewardship studies sustainability technical theory toxic U.S. DOE U.S. Environmental Protection U.S. EPA uncertainty understand University Press utilitarian value judgments virtue Washington Younker Yucca Mountain