About AEI My AEI Support AEI Contact AEI
Home Events Books Short Publications Research Areas Scholars & Fellows


Search


FindAdvanced Search

Browse all books by:
- Date
- Subject
- Author
- Title

BOOKS
About the AEI Press
Orders and Shipping
Book Reviews
Press Releases

AEI Classics

AEI is rereleasing some of its most prescient and groundbreaking works from its earliest thinkers and innovators. These books, part of a series called AEI Classics, are available for download as Adobe Acrobat PDFs.

E-NEWSLETTERS
Enter e-mail:
 

Home >  Books >  What Risk?
What Risk?
Print Mail
Science, Politics & Public Health
Edited by Roger Bate, David Davis
Posted: Saturday, January 1, 2000
What Risk?
Dimensions: 1.00 x 9.75 x 6.50
328 pages
Butterworth-Heinemann
Publication Date: March 1998
Paperback
ISBN: 750642289
Hardcover
ISBN: 0750638109

Whether the public or the environment is at risk is a commonly discussed question in numerous areas of public life, most recently and publicly with regard to issues like BSE, passive smoking and the dangers from pesticides in food production. It is therefore of great importance for everyone concerned with these issues--both policy makers and the public who may be subject to their decisions--to understand the basis on which 'risk' policy is made. The principle objective of this book is to highlight the uncertainties inherent in 'scientific' estimates of risk to the public and the environment resulting from exposure to certain hazards. It is not often that one comes across a book that reads like the smell of fresh air after being cooped in a smell room; such a book is this.

--Safety & Health Practitioner

Numerous examples of potential and real hazards are given. They all show that injury to personal health or the environment is a function not only of the toxicity (i.e. the lethality of a particular hazard) but of the level of exposure to the hazard concerned--in the words of the old maxim, the dose makes the poison. Existing regulation is criticized for being based on a flawed application of a poor epidemiological methodology, where toxicity is the basis of regulation and dose tends to be ignored. Furthermore, some authors conclude that risk is a subjective phenomenon that cannot be eliminated through regulation.

Roger Bate is a visiting fellow at AEI.



Table of Contents

I. Methodology

1. Thresholds for carcinogens: a review of the relevant science and its implications for regulatory policy
2. Biases introduced by confounding and imperfect retrospective and prospective exposure assessments
3. Problems with very low dose risk evaluation: the case of asbestos

II. Science 

4. Benzene and leukaemia
5. Is environmental tobacco smoke a risk factor for lung cancer?
6. Beneficial ionizing radiation
7. Pollution, pesticides and cancer misconceptions
8. Interpretation of epidemiological studies with modestly elevated relative risks
9. The risks of dioxin to human health

III. Science Policy 

10. Public policy and public health: coping with potential medical disaster
11. How are decisions taken by governments on environmental issues?

IV. Commentaries 

12. Should we trust science?
13. The proper role of science in determining low-dose hazard, and appropriate policy uses of this information

V. Perception 

14. Mass media and environmental risk: seven principles
15. Cars, cholera, cows, and contaminated land: virtual risk and the management of uncertainty

Related Links
Order from Barnes and Noble


Also by Roger Bate
Recent Articles
From Bangkok to the Beltway
Bad Medicine
China's Bad Medicine Is No Game
Latest Book
Making a Killing
The Deadly Implications of the Counterfeit Drug Trade
Making a Killing
Making a Killing

In Making a Killing: The Deadly Implications of the Counterfeit Drug Trade, AEI resident fellow Roger Bate analyzes the burgeoning international trade in counterfeit drugs and recommends steps that governments and law enforcement agencies could take to stop it.


Air Quality in America
Air Quality in America

This detailed, data-driven book rebuts mistaken perceptions that U.S. air quality is bad by documenting marked improvements over the past decades.


Europe's Coming Demographic Challenge- thumbnail
Europe's Coming Demographic Challenge

The promise of "healthy aging" offers significant opportunities for economic growth and development for Europe in the decades ahead--if governments and citizens are willing to grasp them.