Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Physical Sciences and Mathematics (8)
- Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration (6)
- Environmental Sciences (4)
- Arts and Humanities (3)
- Defense and Security Studies (3)
-
- Nuclear (3)
- Physics (3)
- Science and Technology Studies (3)
- Environmental Health and Protection (2)
- Environmental Indicators and Impact Assessment (2)
- Environmental Policy (2)
- Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology (2)
- Civil Rights and Discrimination (1)
- Climate (1)
- Communication (1)
- Computer Sciences (1)
- Curriculum and Instruction (1)
- Databases and Information Systems (1)
- Education (1)
- Ethics in Religion (1)
- Fresh Water Studies (1)
- Gender, Race, Sexuality, and Ethnicity in Communication (1)
- Geography (1)
- Health Policy (1)
- History (1)
- Law (1)
- Library and Information Science (1)
- Mass Communication (1)
- Medicine and Health Sciences (1)
- Keyword
-
- Forums (Discussion and debate); Programs; Symposiums (2)
- Africanized honey bees; Africanized honeybee; Honeybee; Language and culture; Killer bees; Nevada – Las Vegas Valley; Sociolinguistics; Symbolic domains; Word imagery (1)
- Agricultural communities; Health risks; Livestock health; Nevada -- Nevada Test Site; Nevada Test Site (NTS); Nuclear weapons -- Testing; Radiation carcinogenesis; Radiation exposure; Radioactive fallout; Radioactive pollution; Ranching communities; Rural conditions; Sheep -- Radioactive contamination; U.S. Atomic Energy Commission – Officials and employees; Utah (1)
- Applied ethics; Business ethics; Ethics – Study and teaching; Information science – Moral and ethical aspects; Information technology – Moral and ethical aspects; Professional ethics (1)
- Bombings -- Prevention; Dirty bombs; Dirty bombs – Prevention; Nuclear weapons; Radioactive Dispersion Devices (RDD); Security systems; Strategic targets; Terrorism (1)
-
- California -- Hetch Hetchy Reservoir; Dams; Environmental impacts; Environmental quality; Massachusetts; Massachusetts -- Quabbin Reservoir; Massachusetts--Swift River Valley; Quabbin reservoir; Swift River Valley; Water supplies; Water supply; Wilderness areas -- Social aspect; Wilderness values (1)
- Climate change (1)
- Climate change; Climatic changes; Continents; Environmental degradation; Environmental hazards; Environmental impacts; Environmental quality; Natural disasters; Pacific Islands; Pacific Ocean --Islands of the Pacific; Small island environments (1)
- Climatic changes (1)
- Cold war; Decision-making; Nevada – Nevada Test Site; Nevada Test Site (NTS); Nevada Test Site Oral History Project (NTSOHP); Oral histories; Oral history (1)
- College courses; Civil liberties; Civil rights; Education (1)
- Environmental disasters; Environmental impact analyses; Environmental impact analysis; National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA); National Environmental Policy Act of 1969; Nevada—Yucca Mountain; Psychological impact; Radioactive waste repositories; Stigma-related impacts; Stigma (Social psychology) (1)
- Forums (Discussion and debate); Invitations; Syposium documents (1)
- Global warming and society (1)
- Global warming – Prevention (1)
- Global warming – Social aspects (1)
- Higher; Liberty; National security; Privacy; Privacy (1)
- Probabilistic risk assessment (PRA) (1)
- Reversing global warming (1)
- Right of; Risk assessment -- Study and teaching (Higher); Surveillance technologies; Surveillance -- Technology (1)
- Risk assessment (1)
Articles 1 - 13 of 13
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Session 11 - “Dangerous Things”: A Symbolic Domain For Killer Bees, Daniel E. Lebas
Session 11 - “Dangerous Things”: A Symbolic Domain For Killer Bees, Daniel E. Lebas
International Symposium on Technology and Society
Viewing usage of words in culture as key symbols, Sherry B. Ortner's indicators were applied to an analysis of the lay-public’s use of "killer bee", "Africanized Honey Bee", and "honey bee". While conducting social impact study in southern Nevada, the author noticed that informants were not associating "killer bee" with "honey bee" imagery. Interviews were conducted with residents in the community of Boulder City, Nevada focusing upon symbolic linkage between the expressions: honey bee, killer bee and Africanized Honey Bee. It was determined that people do not link these expressions together in the same symbolic domain. Ethnohistory of the human/bee …
Session 11 - Radioactive Dispersion Devices (Rdd): What Are The Odds?, Dennis Bechtel
Session 11 - Radioactive Dispersion Devices (Rdd): What Are The Odds?, Dennis Bechtel
International Symposium on Technology and Society
Since the tragic events of September 11th, 2001 there has been apprehension that the United States may be ill-prepared to prevent future terrorist events. One source of concern is that a Radioactive Dispersion Device (RDD) could be detonated at a vulnerable target anywhere in the nation. A RDD, also known as a “dirty bomb, is a conventional explosive packed with radioactive material. The explosion could disperse radioactive material over a wide area. The target could be an icon associated with American democracy and government, critical systems and infrastructure, a water supply, a nuclear power plant and others. Such an event …
Session 10 - Risk Education: Teaching (And Learning) About Technology And Uncertainty In Society, Julian Kilker
Session 10 - Risk Education: Teaching (And Learning) About Technology And Uncertainty In Society, Julian Kilker
International Symposium on Technology and Society
Recently heightened concerns about governmental and corporate surveillance, coupled with long-term social and psychological research on privacy, present both an opportunity and a challenge for discussions about risks and risk assessments related to national security and civil liberties, as well as discussions about the social implications of technology in general. These issues include ethics, assessing uncertainty, balancing risks, and negotiating multidisciplinary expertise. This paper contextualizes the planning, implementing, and responses to several iterations of the Honors course “Who’s watching? Media, privacy, and surveillance,” within the larger topic of pedagogical practices appropriate for examining important, but controversial, topics related to technology …
Session 9 - The Century Of Living Dangerously, Part Ii: Confronting Uncertainty, R. J. Bogumil
Session 9 - The Century Of Living Dangerously, Part Ii: Confronting Uncertainty, R. J. Bogumil
International Symposium on Technology and Society
Probabilistic risk assessment (PRA) methodological limitations as well as environmental application-specific features confound much needed objective analysis and hope for equitable remediation of anthropogenic climate change. Issues addressed include: risk subjectivism, the difficulty of mathematical and computer model prediction-validity assessment associated with chaotic system dynamics, as well as standards of scholarship and the obstacle to societal reform posed by commercial, consumer-driven mass-media journalism.
International Symposium On Technology And Society Program, David M. Hassenzahl
International Symposium On Technology And Society Program, David M. Hassenzahl
International Symposium on Technology and Society
Conference program
Session 7 - A Comparative Geographic Analysis Of The Impact Of Scale On Hazards And Vulnerability In Industrialized Continental Lands And Small Pacific Islands, William J. Smith Jr.
Session 7 - A Comparative Geographic Analysis Of The Impact Of Scale On Hazards And Vulnerability In Industrialized Continental Lands And Small Pacific Islands, William J. Smith Jr.
International Symposium on Technology and Society
Geography, specifically scale, has significant impacts in terms of hazards and vulnerability. Small islands, such as those found in the Pacific, experience the impacts of their relatively unique geography and scale in terms of hazards and vulnerability in at least five ways: 1) Perception and communication; 2) Impact and escape from impact; 3) Technology; 4) Recovery; and 5) Socio-environmental justice. Comparative analysis in these five areas between the Pacific’s small islands and industrialized continental regions illuminates differences regarding the way hazards and vulnerability should be conceptualized in the under-treated small islands of the world. Lessons from this analysis will aid …
Session 7 - Technology And The Creation Of Wilderness: The Making Of Quabbin Reservoir, Timothy J. Farnham
Session 7 - Technology And The Creation Of Wilderness: The Making Of Quabbin Reservoir, Timothy J. Farnham
International Symposium on Technology and Society
Large dams in the United States have frequently been the targets of attacks by environmentalists who believe that the dams and the reservoirs they create are violations of wilderness. There are currently numerous proposals to dismantle some dams in order to restore river ecosystems to their pre-dam conditions, including Hetch Hetchy Reservoir’s O’ Shaunnessy Dam. Less attention has been paid to those dams and reservoirs that have arguably created protected areas that otherwise may have been subject to degradation from development. The Quabbin Reservoir, the primary water source for metropolitan Boston, serves as a prime example. Viewed as an engineering …
Session 6 - The National Environmental Policy Act (Nepa): Is It All That It Can Be? The Case For Evaluating Stigma Effects, Dennis Bechtel
Session 6 - The National Environmental Policy Act (Nepa): Is It All That It Can Be? The Case For Evaluating Stigma Effects, Dennis Bechtel
International Symposium on Technology and Society
The National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) has long been regarded as the“Magna Carta” of environmental policy legislation. The government in implementing its requirements on NEPA is required to evaluate potential environmental impacts from “significant” projects, to examine alternatives to proposed actions, and to enable the public to provide meaningful input to decision-makers. Despite the significance of NEPA there is evidence to suggest that environmental impact analyses may in fact be understating potential negative effects to citizens and communities. In particular potential impacts associated with stigma have been almost universally ignored in documents prepared under NEPA. The proposed high-level nuclear waste …
Session 2 - Societal-Consciousness In The Computing Curricula: A Time For Serious Introspection, Daniel Moix, Srini Ramaswamy
Session 2 - Societal-Consciousness In The Computing Curricula: A Time For Serious Introspection, Daniel Moix, Srini Ramaswamy
International Symposium on Technology and Society
This paper addresses the growing need for inculcating appropriate ethics within the computing curriculum by fostering the development of a societally-conscious ethical framework among our students to address the use of information technology vis-à-vis government, business and society. We propose a new integrated model based approach (IDEA) and suggest its adoption to encourage students on reflecting upon the social and ethical ramifications of technology, beyond the narrow, project focused tunnel vision that currently (subliminally) exists in many computing curricula, and in particular, in today’s profit-focused, consulting and contract-based software industry.
Session 1 - Cold War Technoscience In Nevada: The Nevada Test Site Oral History Project, Mary Palevsky
Session 1 - Cold War Technoscience In Nevada: The Nevada Test Site Oral History Project, Mary Palevsky
International Symposium on Technology and Society
During the Cold War, the United States conducted over 1000 nuclear weapons tests. Of those, 928 took place at the Nevada Test Site (NTS). One hundred tests were in the atmosphere and 921 underground at the 1375 square mile site located 65 north of Las Vegas. Nevada Test Site Oral History Project (NTSOHP) researchers have conducted over 300 hours of interviews with individuals affiliated with and impacted by the NTS, documenting the diversity of experience among many communities of voices including: weapons scientists, test site officials, laborers, contractors and support personnel, the military, American Indians, communities downwind of the NTS, …
Session 1 - Rationalizing The Home Front: The Cold War, The Nevada Test Site, And Radiation Exposure, Leisl A. Carr
Session 1 - Rationalizing The Home Front: The Cold War, The Nevada Test Site, And Radiation Exposure, Leisl A. Carr
International Symposium on Technology and Society
Beginning in 1953, radiation exposure and its effects became a hotly contested issue between the government, members of communities surrounding the Nevada Test Site (NTS), and researchers within the national scientific community. The Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), concerned about maintaining a continental testing facility and aware that atomic testing would impact communities surrounding the NTS, sent representatives to areas potentially affected by fallout to instruct and reassure the affected public. How government officials perceived neighboring communities and how these communities perceived these representatives of the government often determined public responses to the atomic testing program. The story of radiation monitors …
International Symposium On Technology And Society Invitation, David M. Hassenzahl
International Symposium On Technology And Society Invitation, David M. Hassenzahl
International Symposium on Technology and Society
Conference invitation
International Symposium On Technology And Society Program +, David M. Hassenzahl
International Symposium On Technology And Society Program +, David M. Hassenzahl
International Symposium on Technology and Society
Conference program, call for papers, & proposal