Cover image for What is safe? the risks of living in a nuclear age
What is safe? the risks of living in a nuclear age
Title:
What is safe? the risks of living in a nuclear age
Author:
Williams, David R. (David Raymond)
ISBN:
9781847552365
Publication Information:
Cambridge : Royal Society of Chemistry, c1998.
Physical Description:
viii, 146 p. : ill., ports. ; 24 cm.
Contents:
Daily life -- Childhood -- Transport risks -- Homes -- Recreation -- Healthcare -- Diet -- Medical -- Energy -- Perception -- Risk, perception and social constructions -- Risk management -- Risks at work -- Risks from chemicals -- General principles of risk -- Defining "safe" and "safe enough" -- Statistics : dealing with large numbers -- Radioactive waste disposal -- Modelling doses and risks -- Marshalling our facts -- Perception of radwaste disposal.
Abstract:
This product is not available separately, it is only sold as part of a set. There are 750 products in the set and these are all sold as one entity. "Is it safe?" "What are the risks involved?" are questions frequently asked by members of the public. This unique book explains the fundamental problems faced in modern-day life. Terms such as "risk" and "safe" are clearly defined, and the risks encountered between birth and death are discussed, including transport, the home, healthcare, diet, and the workplace. The perception of risk, and the risks from radiation (natural, radwaste and nuclear reactors) are covered, along with management of risk and the psychology of risk perception. What is Safe? The Risks of Living in a Nuclear Age is illustrated with examples from the most deeply researched areas. Written for the lay-person, the volume also includes a complete reprint of the late Lord Walter Marshall's famous lecture "The Radioactive Garden". It will be of interest to students, teachers, researchers, industrialists or indeed anyone wishing for an up-to-date view of risk and safety.
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