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                                       Details for article 146 of 222 found articles
 
 
  Overview: The future of ecological risk assessment
 
 
Title: Overview: The future of ecological risk assessment
Author: Lackey, Robert T.
Appeared in: Human and ecological risk assessment
Paging: Volume 1 (1995) nr. 4 pages 339-343
Year: 1995-10
Contents: Risk assessment has become a popular tool to help solve ecological problems. The basic concept is not new and has been applied to diverse decision problems. The application to ecological problems, especially complex ecological problems, is fairly recent and controversial. The fundamental and most important elements of the controversy revolve around two key points: (1) a person's implicit “world view;”; and (2) the assumption of who (or what) receives the benefits and who (or what) pays the costs for ecological “decisions.”; A person's attitude toward risk assessment is, at least implicitly, defined by a world view. It is this world view that defines how each of us reacts to risk assessment applied to ecological problems. How the question of benefits and costs is defined also defines the appropriate use, if any, of ecological risk assessment. The future of ecological risk assessment will almost certainly follow the course of other analytical tools: enthusiastic support, rapid, widespread adoption and use; then disillusionment and rapid replacement with newer approaches, but with continued use for a greatly constrained set of ecological issues.
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 146 of 222 found articles
 
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 Koninklijke Bibliotheek - National Library of the Netherlands