The environmental impact statement after two generations : managing environmental power
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The environmental impact statement after two generations : managing environmental power
(The natural and built environment series)
Routledge, 2012
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 210-223) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book is about a subject that Michael Greenberg has worked on and lived with for almost forty years. He was brought up in the south Bronx at a time when his neighborhood suffered from terrible air and noise pollution, and domestic waste went untreated into the Hudson River. For him, the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) was a blessing. It included an ethical position about the environment, and the law required some level of accountability in the form of an environmental impact statement, or EIS.
After forty years of thinking about and working with NEPA and the EIS process, Greenberg decided to conduct his own evaluation from the perspective of a person trained in science who focuses on environmental and environmental health policies. This book of carefully chosen real case studies goes beyond the familiar checklists of what to do, and shows students and practitioners alike what really happens during the creation and implementation of an EIS.
Table of Contents
1. A Statement of Values and Forty Years of Field Trials 2. Metropolitan New Jersey: Transportation, Sprawl and Urban Revitalization 3. Ellis Island, New York Harbor: Time Closes in on a National Cultural Treasure 4. Sparrows Point, Maryland: Proposed Liquefied Natural Gas Facilities 5. Johnston Island: Destruction of the U.S. Chemical Weapons Stockpile 6. Savannah River Nuclear Weapons Facility: Managing the Legacy of the Military's Nuclear Factory 7. Animas-La Plata, Four Corners: Water Rights and the Ute Legacy 8. NEPA and the Challenges of the Early 21st Century
by "Nielsen BookData"