Making Better Environmental Decisions: An Alternative to Risk Assessment

Front Cover

For the past quarter-century, government and the private sector have relied heavily on risk assessment for making decisions, allowing widespread environmental deterioration. In this book, Mary O'Brien recommends a simple yet profound shift to another decision-making technique: "alternatives assessment." Instead of asking how much of a hazardous activity is safe (which translates into how much damage the environment can tolerate), alternatives assessment asks how we can avoid or minimize damage while achieving society's goals. Alternatives assessment is a simple, commonsense alternative to risk assessment. It is based on the premise that it is not acceptable to damage human and nonhuman health or the environment if there are reasonable alternatives. The approach calls for taking precautionary measures even if some cause-and-effect relationships have not been fully established scientifically. The process must involve an examination of the full range of alternatives, including no action at all. Equally important, it must be democratic and include potentially affected parties. O'Brien not only makes a persuasive case for alternative assessment; she tells how to implement it. She also shows how this technique has profound implications for public health, for our stewardship of the environment, and for a truly democratic government. Published in association with the Environmental Research Foundation.

 

Contents

Goal Replace Risk Assessment with Alternatives Assessment
5
How Does Risk Assessment Actually Work?
19
What Are We Defending with Risk Assessment?
41
When Scientists Shut Their Eyes Pretending That the Safety of Hazardous Activities Can Be Estimated
61
When Decision Makers Become Compromised Pronouncing Unnecessary Hazardous Activities Acceptable
77
When a Society Isnt Serious About Environmental Health Assessing a Narrow Range of Options
91
Who Loves Uses or Cooperates with Risk Assessment?
103
Unnecessary Societal Triage Comparative Risk Assessment
115
We Already Know How to Do Alternatives Assessment
149
We Know How to Push for Alternatives Assessments
173
The Essential Features of an Alternatives Assessment
193
A Society That Assesses Its Alternatives
205
Alternatives Assessment More Information Fewer Pages
217
Getting Started
227
Barriers to Alternatives Assessment
237
Forces for Alternatives Assessment
253

Alternatives Assessment as an Alternative to Risk Assessment
129
Alternatives Assessment The Case of Bovine Growth Hormone and Rotational Grazing
131
Alternatives Assessment vs CostBenefit Analysis There Is More to Life Than Money
141
Notes
257
References
269
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Page xi - The process of applying the Precautionary Principle must be open, informed and democratic and must include potentially affected parties. It must also involve an examination of the full range of alternatives, including no action.

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