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Love Canal : a toxic history from Colonial times to the present / Richard S. Newman.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Oxford University Press, [2016]Description: xvii, 306 pages ; 25 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780195374834
  • 0195374835
Subject(s):
Contents:
Introduction: of burial mounds and toxic tombs -- Past as prologue: developing Niagara before Love Canal -- Building Love's canal -- The master of the chemical machine: the rise of Hooker -- Worlds collide at Love's canal -- A toxic subdivision: the problem at Love Canal -- Growing protest at Love Canal -- Widening the circle of influence -- In the end is the beginning: Love Canal lessons -- Creative destruction: resettling Love Canal and its discontents.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Adult Book Main Library NonFiction 363.7384 N554 Available 33111008406775
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

In the summer of 1978, residents of Love Canal, a suburban development in Niagara Falls, NY, began protesting against the leaking toxic waste dump - a sixteen-acre site containing 100,000 barrels of chemical waste that anchored their neighborhood. Initially seeking evacuation, area activists soon found that they were engaged in a far larger battle over the meaning of America's industrial past and its environmental future. The Love Canal protest movement inaugurated the era of grassroots environmentalism, spawning new anti-toxics laws and new models of ecological protest.Historian Richard S. Newman examines the Love Canal crisis through the area's broader landscape, detailing the way this ever-contentious region has been used, altered, and understood from the colonial era to the present day. Newman journeys into colonial battles between Native Americans and European settlers over land use, 19th century utopian city planning, the rise of the American chemical industry in the 20th century, the transformation of environmental activism in the 1970s, and the memory of environmental disasters in our own time.In an era of hydrofracking and renewed concern about nuclear waste disposal, Love Canal remains relevant. It is only by starting at the very beginning of the site's environmental history that we can understand the road to a hazardous waste crisis in the 1970s - and to the global environmental justice movement it sparked.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction: of burial mounds and toxic tombs -- Past as prologue: developing Niagara before Love Canal -- Building Love's canal -- The master of the chemical machine: the rise of Hooker -- Worlds collide at Love's canal -- A toxic subdivision: the problem at Love Canal -- Growing protest at Love Canal -- Widening the circle of influence -- In the end is the beginning: Love Canal lessons -- Creative destruction: resettling Love Canal and its discontents.

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