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Get Free AccessThe measurement of the risk-related impacts from the siting of a high-level nuclear waste (HLNW) repository represents a new and important addition to conventional socioeconomic impact studies. In particular, the driving forces behind these impacts are the risks people perceive to be associated with the repository. Measuring the risk impacts requires a complementary set of approaches, of which, risk surveys are the cornerstone.a The purpose of these surveys is to provide scientifically defensible measures of the risk-related impacts. The risk surveys follow directly from a conceptual framework of how the HLNW repository affects peoples` perceptions and, ultimately, their behaviors. These surveys describe and measure: Characteristics of individuals, Risks people perceive from the HLNW repository, Views, or mind sets, they form about the HLNW repository, Changes in behaviors--e.g., changes in retirement decisions or industrial relocations--induced by the location of the repository, and Changes in well-being of Nevada citizens, if the repository were located at Yucca Mountain.
Howard Kunreuther, Paul Slovic, Joanne M. Nigg, William H. Desvousges (1987). Yucca Mountain socioeconomic project report on the 1987 risk perception telephone surveys. , DOI: https://doi.org/10.2172/140782.
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Type
Report
Year
1987
Authors
4
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
en
DOI
https://doi.org/10.2172/140782
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