Publication | Closed Access
Support for Waste Facility Siting: Differences between Community Leaders and Residents
31
Citations
47
References
1998
Year
EngineeringCommunity PerceptionEnvironmental Impact AssessmentEnvironmental PlanningEnvironmental PolicySocial SciencesLocal Waste FacilityEnvironmental HealthManagementEnvironmental ManagementPublic HealthWaste Facility SitingCommunity LeadersPublic PolicyCommunity LeadershipWaste ReductionCommunity EngagementSocial ImpactAbstract DecisionsMunicipal Solid WasteEnvironmental JusticeWaste ManagementWaste PreventionCommunity DevelopmentIllegal DumpingHazardous Waste FacilityCommunity PlanningResident Services
Abstract Decisions regarding hazardous waste facility siting are now open to extensive public debate. Efforts on the part of public officials and private companies to site waste management facilities have been thwarted by public opposition. Using survey data from leaders and residents in communities which are hosting or siting facilities, this study examines their sociodemographic characteristics, knowledge, levels of trust, perceptions of risk, perceptions of economic impacts, perceptions of equity issues and the differential effects of these factors on acceptance of local waste facility siting. Leaders in these communities were more supportive of local waste facility siting than were other community residents. The major determinant of leaders' acceptance of waste siting was their perceptions of the economic benefits of a facility to the community. Although this was also important to residents, perceptions of health, safety, and environmental contamination risks had larger effects on their acceptance of such facilities.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1