Book Summary of Acceptable Risk?: Making Decisions in a Toxic Environment by Lee Clarke
Citation:
Acceptable Risk?: Making Decisions in a Toxic Environment, Lee Clarke, (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989), 220 pp.
This Book Summary written by: T.A. O'Lonergan, Conflict Research Consortium
Acceptable Risk?: Making Decisions in a Toxic Environment will be of
interest to those who seek an understanding of the decision-making process amid
the chaos following a toxic contamination accident. The first chapter
considers creating risks. The chapter is an explanation of the events leading
up to the point when a transformer coolant breached containment in the
state office building in Binghamton, New York. The transformer
contained polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) which, when burned at
high temperatures, produce highly toxic substances (dioxins). The
remainder of the book is an examination of the management of the clean-up and
the identification of workers and inhabitants exposed.
Chapter two examines the organisation of decontamination efforts and
medical surveillance in the midst of organizational chaos. It examines
what the author terms 'organizational anarchy' wherein each state, federal
and local organisation goes about its self-selected responsibilities without the
benefit of an overall organizational effort. Chapter three is an examination of
the need for constricting the field of organisations involved in the decontamination
project. The author addresses the involvement of: local, county,
state and federal agencies in the Binghamton
clean-up.
Chapter four examines the resolution of organizational dilemmas in a
discussion of the Broome County government's risk. Clarke
offers a systematic examination of the process of making decisions about the
Binghamton clean-up project. The first phase of such an effort is to
define the problem, followed by assessing the consequences. This is followed by
the ordering of alternatives and the constructing of acceptable risk
assessments. The final phase is the acceptance of risk. Chapter five is
devoted to the organisation of medical surveillance. The author offers
a discussion on assessing the problem and the initiation of surveillance. The
problem of malleable science is addressed prior to a discussion of the
division of labour which emerges during the process of medical surveillance.
Chapter six is devoted to the organising efforts required to begin the decontamination
process. The author offers an attempt at a solution to the chemical
problems. The chapter closes with a discussion of symbolic risk: the
decision whether to decontaminate or destroy the Binghamton state
office building. This is followed by a discussion of the treatment of exposed
workers and the need to organize their dissent activities. The
final chapter is devoted to the organisation of risk. This chapter examines:
the disruption of routine, the structural basis of individual dissent, symbols
and organizational dissent, and theories of choice. The author discusses
the two phases of clean-up efforts. The first phase is the undirected efforts
which multiple agencies made toward clean-up. Many of these efforts were not
only misguided, but needlessly exposed more workers to high levels of contamination.
The second phase is the State of New York's assumption of the risk and
their role as organising agency for the decontamination efforts. The
text is followed by two appendices: the first identifying the players and the
second offering a methodological accounting.
Acceptable Risk?: Making Decisions in a Toxic Environment is a
careful examination of a single case of the creation and assessment of risk and
the resultant medical surveillance and decontamination efforts.
While addressing a particular incident, the overall approach is applicable to
other incidents of toxic contamination.
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