Hazardous Waste: The Beginning of International Organizations Addressing a Growing Global Challenge in the 1970s

Hazardous waste began gaining public attention in industrialized countries in the 1970s, partly as a result of several scandals involving former waste sites. Early on, several international organizations (IOs), notably the EEC, NATO, OECD and WHO, addressed the issue in publications, surveys and the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Iris Borowy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2019-12-01
Series:Worldwide Waste
Subjects:
who
Online Access:https://www.worldwidewastejournal.com/articles/39
id doaj-c6fede68fcc04e4d989ca4cce7cd8036
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c6fede68fcc04e4d989ca4cce7cd80362020-11-25T01:20:11ZengUbiquity PressWorldwide Waste2399-71172019-12-012110.5334/wwwj.3918Hazardous Waste: The Beginning of International Organizations Addressing a Growing Global Challenge in the 1970sIris Borowy0Shanghai UniversityHazardous waste began gaining public attention in industrialized countries in the 1970s, partly as a result of several scandals involving former waste sites. Early on, several international organizations (IOs), notably the EEC, NATO, OECD and WHO, addressed the issue in publications, surveys and the collection of data. Collectively, these initiatives addressed crucial questions regarding the definition, collection, transportation and disposal of hazardous waste. Above all, they provided space and subtle pressure for national authorities to gather information about a problem which, so far, had been all but ignored. These programs revealed the improvised nature of much policy-making at the time but also offered the opportunity to consider hazardous waste management within larger development pathways. The perspectives taken during discussions at IOs vacillated between pragmatic, simple collection of data and superficial searching for short-term management in terms of trying to get rid of the substances and more principled considerations of how to find long-term solutions for hazardous waste through comprehensive approaches that integrated all stages of production from produce planning to disposal. Thus, IOs did not prevent the increasing spread of toxic materials into the environment. But they may have mitigated its form and paved the way for alternative development planning in the long run.https://www.worldwidewastejournal.com/articles/39hazardous wasteinternational organizationsoecdwaste and developmentnatowho
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Iris Borowy
spellingShingle Iris Borowy
Hazardous Waste: The Beginning of International Organizations Addressing a Growing Global Challenge in the 1970s
Worldwide Waste
hazardous waste
international organizations
oecd
waste and development
nato
who
author_facet Iris Borowy
author_sort Iris Borowy
title Hazardous Waste: The Beginning of International Organizations Addressing a Growing Global Challenge in the 1970s
title_short Hazardous Waste: The Beginning of International Organizations Addressing a Growing Global Challenge in the 1970s
title_full Hazardous Waste: The Beginning of International Organizations Addressing a Growing Global Challenge in the 1970s
title_fullStr Hazardous Waste: The Beginning of International Organizations Addressing a Growing Global Challenge in the 1970s
title_full_unstemmed Hazardous Waste: The Beginning of International Organizations Addressing a Growing Global Challenge in the 1970s
title_sort hazardous waste: the beginning of international organizations addressing a growing global challenge in the 1970s
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Worldwide Waste
issn 2399-7117
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Hazardous waste began gaining public attention in industrialized countries in the 1970s, partly as a result of several scandals involving former waste sites. Early on, several international organizations (IOs), notably the EEC, NATO, OECD and WHO, addressed the issue in publications, surveys and the collection of data. Collectively, these initiatives addressed crucial questions regarding the definition, collection, transportation and disposal of hazardous waste. Above all, they provided space and subtle pressure for national authorities to gather information about a problem which, so far, had been all but ignored. These programs revealed the improvised nature of much policy-making at the time but also offered the opportunity to consider hazardous waste management within larger development pathways. The perspectives taken during discussions at IOs vacillated between pragmatic, simple collection of data and superficial searching for short-term management in terms of trying to get rid of the substances and more principled considerations of how to find long-term solutions for hazardous waste through comprehensive approaches that integrated all stages of production from produce planning to disposal. Thus, IOs did not prevent the increasing spread of toxic materials into the environment. But they may have mitigated its form and paved the way for alternative development planning in the long run.
topic hazardous waste
international organizations
oecd
waste and development
nato
who
url https://www.worldwidewastejournal.com/articles/39
work_keys_str_mv AT irisborowy hazardouswastethebeginningofinternationalorganizationsaddressingagrowingglobalchallengeinthe1970s
_version_ 1725134957879230464