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    Native Americans Respond to the Transportation of Low Level Radioactive Waste to the Nevada Test Site

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    Author
    Austin, Diane E.
    Stoffle, Richard W.
    Stewart, Sarah
    Shamir, Eylon
    Gardner, Andrew
    Fish, Allyson
    Barton, Karen
    Affiliation
    Bureau of Applied Research in Anthropology, University of Arizona
    Issue Date
    1998-09
    Keywords
    Department of Energy
    Nevada Test Site
    Southern Paiute
    Western Shoshone
    Owens Valley Paiute
    Goshute
    Mojave
    Hopi
    Navajo
    Radioactive Waste
    
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    Collection Information
    This item is part of the Richard Stoffle Collection. It was digitized from a physical copy provided by Richard Stoffle, Bureau of Applied Research in Anthropology, School of Anthropology at the University of Arizona. For more information about items in this collection, please email Special Collections, askspecialcollections@u.library.arizona.edu.
    Publisher
    Bureau of Applied Research in Anthropology, University of Arizona
    Description
    This study is about the impacts of the transportation of low level radioactive waste (LLRW) on American Indians. The terms American Indians, Native Americans, and Indians are used interchangeably throughout this report to refer to people who are members of tribes in the United States. The information contained in this report is valuable to non -Indian individuals, communities, and governments as well as to the tribes and the U.S. Department of Energy/Nevada Operations Office (DOE/NV) for which it was prepared. Many of the individuals who agreed to participate in this study asked if their non -Indian neighbors were also being given the opportunity to share their views and perspectives on the transportation of LLRW near and through their neighborhoods. Although this study was designed to include only Native Americans, it can serve as a model for additional studies in non –Indian communities. American Indian tribes have a unique status as sovereign nations within the U.S., and this study was designed to address that relationship.This study includes an assessment of social and cultural impacts. One type of impact assessment concerns the estimation and communication of risks associated with potentially dangerous technologies or substances. Such an assessment, a technological "risk assessment," is generally conducted by natural or physical scientists and focuses on the probability and magnitude of various scenarios through time (Wolfe 1988). The specialists who conduct the assessment believe their estimates reflect the "real risks" of a technology or project because the estimates were made using scientific calculations. This study is not a risk assessment. Instead, this study pays attention to the public perceptions of impacts and risks. Like other social scientists, the researchers and American Indian partners who designed and conducted this study focus on public perceptions and frame the discussions in terms of locally defined values and concerns.This study involves 29 tribes and subgroups and is therefore very complex. Every effort has been made to present information systematically to help the reader make sense of what is being presented. Information about the tribes is presented in the same order throughout the report.
    Note
    This is one of two reports addressing this study.
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    Nevada Test Site Native American Ethnographic Studies

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