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<p>Chapter 22 Solid and Hazardous Waste</p><p>General information on books can be reviewed at websites such as amazon.com.</p><p>About. Making Eco-Friendly Lifestyle Choices. http://environment.about.com/od/greenliving/</p><p>About. Recycling. http://environment.about.com/od/recycling/Environmental_Issues_Recyclin g.htm</p><p>Abramovitz, Janet N., and Ashley T. Mattoon. 1999. Paper Cuts: </p><p>Recovering the Paper Landscape. Washington, D. C.: Worldwatch Institute.</p><p>Ackerman, Frank. 1996. Why Do We Recycle? Markets, Values, and </p><p>Public Policy. Washington, D. C.: Island Press.</p><p>Allenby, B.R. 1999. Industrial Ecology: Policy Framework and </p><p>Implementation. Upper Saddle River, N. J.: Prentice Hall/</p><p>Anderson, Ray. 1999. Mid-Course Correction: Toward a Sustainable enterprise: The Interface Model. Atlanta, Ga.: Peregrinzilla Press.</p><p>Andrady, Anthony L., ed. 2003. Plastics and the Environment. Hoboken. </p><p>N. J. Wiley-Interscience. Ashley, S. 2002. “It’s Not Easy Being Green.” Scientific American, April, pp. 32-34.</p><p>Atlas, Ronald M. 1995. "Bioremediation." Chemical and Engineering </p><p>News, April 3, 32.</p><p>Atlas, Ronald M. 1995. “Petroleum Biodegradation and Oil spill </p><p>Remediation.” Marine Pollution Bulletin, vol. 31, 178.</p><p>Ayres, Ed. 2004. “The Hidden Shame of the Industrial Economy.” </p><p>World Watch, January/February, 20.</p><p>Ayres, Robert U., and Leslie W. Ayres. 1996. Industrial Ecology: </p><p>Towards Closing the Materials Cycle. Cheltenham, U.K.: Edward Elgar.</p><p>Ayres, Robert U., and Leslie W. Ayres, eds. 2002. A Handbook of </p><p>Industrial Ecology. Cheltenham, U.K.: Edward Elgar.</p><p>Baker-LaPorte, Paula, et al. 2008. Prescriptions for A Healthy House. 3rd.</p><p>Gabriola Island, B. C., Canada: New Society.</p><p>Balish, Chris. 2006. How to Live Well Without Owning Care: Save </p><p>Money, Breathe Easier and Get More Mileage Out of Life. Berkeley, </p><p>Calif.: Ten Speed Press.</p><p>Ban Mercury Working Group (Ban-Hg-Wg). http://www.ban.org/Ban-</p><p>Hg-Wg/ Barnett, Harold C. 1994. Toxic Debts and the Superfund Dilemma. Chapel </p><p>Hill: University of North Carolina Press.</p><p>Benyus, Janine. 2002. Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature. New </p><p>York: Harper Perennial.</p><p>Bergman, B. J. 1999. “The Hidden Life of Computers.” Sierra, vol. 84, no. </p><p>4, 32. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1525/is_4_84/ai_55152951</p><p>Bisson, Katy, and John R. Proops, eds. 2002. Waste in Ecological </p><p>Economics. Cheltenham, U.K.: Edward Elgar.</p><p>Bragg, James R., et al. 1994. “Effectiveness of Bioremediation for the </p><p>Exxon Valdez Oil Spill.” Nature, vol. 368, 413.</p><p>Brebbia, C. A., et al., eds. 2004. Brownfield Sites II: Assessment, </p><p>Rehabilitation and Development. New York: Computational Mechanics </p><p>(Springer).</p><p>Brown, Lester R. 2007. Plan B: 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization. New </p><p>York: W. W. Norton. http://www.earth-policy.org</p><p>Building Green. http://www.buildinggreen.com/</p><p>Bullard, Robert D. 1994. Dumping in Dixie: Race, Class, and </p><p>Environmental Quality. 2nd ed. Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press. Bullard, Robert D., ed. 2005. The Quest for Environmental Justice: Human</p><p>Rights and the Politics of Pollution. San Francisco, Calif.: Sierra Club </p><p>Books.</p><p>Calow, Peter. 1997. Controlling Environmental Risks from Chemicals: </p><p>Principles and Practice. Hoboken. N. J. Wiley.</p><p>Canada’s National Occupational Health & Safety Resource (CCOHS). </p><p>Chemicals and Materials. http://www.ccohs.ca/oshanswers/chemicals/</p><p>Carless, Jennifer. 1992. Taking Out the Trash: A No-Nonsense Guide to </p><p>Recycling. Washington, D. C.: Island Press.</p><p>Carroll, Chris. 2008. “High-Tech Trash.” National Geographic, January, </p><p>64-81. http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/2008-01/high-tech- trash/carroll-text.html</p><p>Cassels, Jamie. 1993. The Uncertain Promise of Law: Lessons from </p><p>Bhopal. Toronto, Canada: University of Toronto Press.</p><p>Center for Ethics and Toxics (CETOS). http://www.cetos.org/</p><p>Center for Health, Environment, and Justice (CHEJ). http://www.chej.org/</p><p>Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 1991. Preventing Lead </p><p>Poisoning in Young Children. Atlanta, Ga.: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. http://wonder.cdc.gov/wonder/prevguid/p0000029/p0000029.asp</p><p>Chemical & Engineering News. 2004. “Point/Counterpoint: The Many </p><p>Faces of Chlorine.” Chemical & Engineering News, Oct. 10, 40.</p><p>Clapp, Jennifer. 2001. Toxic Exports: The Transfer of Hazardous Wastes from Rich to Poor Countries. Ithaca, N. Y.: Cornell University Press.</p><p>Clayton, Anthony, et al., eds. 1999. Policies for Cleaner Technology. </p><p>London: Earthscan.</p><p>Clean Car Campaign. 2004. Mercury Pollution from Automobiles at </p><p>Record Levels. http://www.cleancarcampaign.org/mercuryupdate.shtml</p><p>Clean Edge. Helping Investors, Industry, and Society Understand and </p><p>Profit From Clean Technology. http://www.cleanedge.com/</p><p>Clean Water Action Council (CWAC) Toxics and Waste. http://www.cwac.net/issues.html</p><p>Coequyt, John, et al. 1999. Mercury Falling: An Analysis of Mercury </p><p>Pollution from Coal-Burning Power Plants. Environmental Working Group,</p><p>Natural Resources Defense Council. http://www.ewg.org/reports/mercuryfalling/mercurypr.html Cohen, Gary, and John O'Connor. 1990. Fighting Toxics: A Manual for </p><p>Protecting Family, Community, and Workplace. Washington, D. C.: Island </p><p>Press.</p><p>Commoner, Barry. 1992. Making Peace with the Planet. Rev. ed. </p><p>Gloucester, Mass.: Peter Smith Publisher.</p><p>Commoner, Barry, et al. 1996. Zeroing Out Dioxin in the Great Lakes: </p><p>Within Our Reach. Flushing College, Queens, N. Y.: Center for the Biology of Natural Systems. http://qcpages.qc.cuny.edu/CBNS/dxnsum.html</p><p>Connett, Paul H. 1992. "The Disposable Society." In F. H. Bormann and </p><p>Stephen R. Kellert, eds. Ecology, Economics, Ethics. New Haven, Conn.: </p><p>Yale University Press, p. 99.</p><p>Connett, Paul, and Ellen Connett. 1994. "Municipal Waste Incineration: </p><p>Wrong Question, Wrong Answer." The Ecologist, January/February, vol. 24,</p><p>14.</p><p>Cooper, Michael. 2003. “City to Resume Recycling of Plastics.” New York </p><p>Times, Jan. 14. http://www.nytimes.com/2003/01/14/nyregion/14RECY.html? ex=1097035200&en=5c2dfe2002de8d3a&ei=5070</p><p>Cothran, Helen, ed. 2002. Garbage and Recycling (Opposing Viewpoints). </p><p>Farmington Hills, Mich.: Greenhaven Press. Crummett, Warren B. 2002. Decades of Dioxin. Philadelphia, Pa.: Xlibris.</p><p>Dahl, Julia. 2002. “How to Recycle Absolutely Anything.” Organic Style, </p><p>November/December, 52.</p><p>Danaher, Kevin, et al. 2007. “Lois Gibbs: How to Be a Citizen Activist.” </p><p>AlterNet, Nov. 29. http://www.alternet.org/envirohealth/ de Graaf, John et al. 2005. Affluenza: The All-Consuming Epidemic. </p><p>2nd ed. San Francisco, Calif.: Berrett-Koehler.</p><p>Deneen, Sally. 2006. “How to Recycle Practically Anything.” E Magazine, </p><p>May/June, 26-31. http://www.truthout.org/cgi- bin/artman/exec/view.cgi/61/20710</p><p>Denison, Richard A., and John Ruston. 1997. "Recycling Is Not </p><p>Garbage." Technology Review, October, 55.</p><p>Devito, Stephen C., and Roger L. Garrett, eds. 1996. Designing Safe </p><p>Chemicals: Green Chemistry for Pollution Prevention. Washington, D. C.: </p><p>American Chemical Society.</p><p>Downwinders: Online Newsletter on Nuclear Energy and Toxics. http://www.downwinders.org/</p><p>D’Silva, Themistocles. 2006. The Black Box of Bhopal: A Closer Look at the World’s Deadliest Industrial Disaster. Victoria, B. C., Canada: Trafford </p><p>Publishing. Durning, Alan Thein. 1992. How Much Is Enough? The Consumer Society and the Future of the Earth. New York: W. W. Norton.</p><p>Eckley, Noelle. 2001. "Traveling Toxics: The Science, Policy, and </p><p>Management of Persistent Organic Pollutants." Environment, vol. 43, no. 7, </p><p>24.</p><p>Edelstein, Michael R. 2004. Poisoned Places: Seeking Environmental </p><p>Justice in a Contaminated World. Boulder, Colo.: Westview. </p><p>Electronics TakeBack Coalition. Take Back My TV (Recycling e-waste). http://takebackmytv.com/page/speakout/TakeBackMyTV</p><p>Elgin, Duane. 1998. Voluntary Simplicity: Toward a Way of Life </p><p>That Is Outwardly Simple, Inwardly Rich. Rev. ed. New York: Harper</p><p>Paperbacks.</p><p>Envirolink: The Online Environmental Community: Pollution </p><p>Prevention. http://www.envirolink.org/topics.html?topic=Pollution</p><p>%20Prevention&topicsku=2002116191202&topictype=subtopic</p><p>Envirolink: The Online Environmental Community: Solid and </p><p>Hazardous Waste (Ground Pollution) http://www.envirolink.org/topics.html? topicsku=2002109191130&topic=Ground%20Pollution&topictype=topic Environment California. Toxics and Environmental Health Program. http://www.environmentcalifornia.org/envirocaliftoxics.asp?id2=13673</p><p>Environment News Service. 2007. “Global Agreement on Mercury </p><p>Pollution In the Works.” Nov. 14. http://www.ens- newswire.com/ens/nov2007/2007-11-14-01.asp</p><p>Environment News Service. 2007. “Testing Detects Lead in Christmas </p><p>Toys.” Dec. 26. http://www.ens-newswire.com/</p><p>Environmental Defense. Toxic Chemical Pollution Scorecard In Local </p><p>Communities. http://www.scorecard.org/</p><p>European Chemical Council. http://www.cefic.be/</p><p>Eyles, John, and Nicole Consitt. 2004. “What’s at Risk? Environmental </p><p>Influences on Human Health.” Environment, vol. 46, no. 8, 25. </p><p>Figdor, Emily. 2004. Reel Danger: Power Plant Mercury Pollution and the</p><p>Fish We Eat. Washington, D. C.: U.S. PIRG Education Fund, Clear the Air. </p><p>August. http://cta.policy.net/proactive/newsroom/release.vtml?id=25680</p><p>Fortun, Kim. 2001. Advocacy After Bhopal: Environmentalism, Disaster, </p><p>New Global Orders. Chicago, Ill.: University of Chicago Press. </p><p>Freeze, R. Allan. 2000. The Environmental Pendulum: A Quest for Truth </p><p>About Toxic Chemicals, Human Health, and the Environment. Berkeley: </p><p>University of California Press. Freudenrich, Craig C. How Composting Works. http://www.howstuffworks.com/composting.htm</p><p>Freudenrich, Craig C. How Landfills Work. http://www.howstuffworks.com/landfill.htm</p><p>Frosch, Robert A. 1995. "Industrial Ecology." Environment, December, 16.</p><p>Gardner, Gary. 1997. Recycling Organic Waste: From Urban Pollutant to </p><p>Farm Resource. Washington, D. C.: Worldwatch Institute.</p><p>Gardner, Gary T., et al. 2004. “The State of Consumption Today.” </p><p>In Worldwatch Institute, State of the World 2004 (New York: W. W. </p><p>Norton), p. 3.</p><p>Gee, David, and Timothy O’Riordan. 2002. The Precautionary Principle in the 20th Century: Late Lessons from Early Warnings. London: Earthscan.</p><p>Geiser, Kenneth. 2001. Materials Matter: Toward a Sustainable Materials </p><p>Policy. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.</p><p>Gertler, Nicholas, and John R. Ehrenfeld. 1996. "A Down-to-Earth </p><p>Approach to Clean Production." Technology Review, February/March, 48.</p><p>Gibbs, Lois. 1997. Dying from Dioxin: A Citizen’s Guide to Reclaiming </p><p>Our Health and Rebuilding Democracy. Tonawanda, N. Y.: Black Rose </p><p>Books. Gibbs, Lois. 1998. Love Canal: The Story Continues. Gabriola Island, B. C.,</p><p>Canada: New Society.</p><p>Girdner, Eddie J., and Jack Smith. 2002. Killing Me Softly: Toxic Waste, </p><p>Corporate Profit, and the Struggle for Environmental Justice. New York: </p><p>Monthly Review Press.</p><p>Glick, Patrica. 2000. The Toll From Coal. Washington, D. C.: National </p><p>Wildlife Federation. </p><p>Goklany, Indur M. 2001. The Precautionary Principle: A Critical </p><p>Appraisal of Environmental Risk Assessment. Washington, D. C.: Cato </p><p>Institute.</p><p>Goldbeck, Nikki, and David Goldbeck. 1995. Choose to Reuse: An </p><p>Encyclopedia of Services, Businesses, Tools & Charitable Programs That </p><p>Facilitate Reuse. Woodstock, N. Y.: Ceres Press</p><p>Gottlieb, Robert, ed. 1995. Reducing Toxics: A New Approach to Policy and Industrial Decisionmaking. Washington, D. C.: Island Press.</p><p>Graedel, Thomas E. 1996. Design for Environment. Upper Saddle River, </p><p>N. J.: Prentice Hall.</p><p>Graedel, Thomas E. 1998. Streamlined Life-Cycle Assessment. Upper </p><p>Saddle River, N. J.: Prentice Hall. Graedel, Thomas E., and Braden. R. Allenby. 2002. Industrial Ecology. </p><p>2nd ed. Upper Saddle River, N. J.: Prentice Hall.</p><p>Greenpeace USA. Toxics. http://www.greenpeaceusa.org/campaigns/intro? campaign_id=503447</p><p>Greer, Linda, et al. 2006. “Curtailing Mercury’s Global Reach.” In State of the World 2006, Worldwatch Institute (New York: W. W. Norton), pp. 96-</p><p>114. http://books.google.com/books?id=Q-</p><p>5WXwHnrlUC&pg=PA102&lpg=PA102&dq=curtailing+mercury's+global</p><p>+reach&source=web&ots=O8RhzcMMe_&sig=P9yhITOrQlDtjuHj- povI0PzQRw - PPA27,M1</p><p>Grist Magazine. 2007. Wake Up and Smell the Planet: The Non-</p><p>Pompous, Non-Preachy Grist Guide to Greening Your Day. Seattle, </p><p>Wash.: Mountaineers Books. </p><p>Grossman, Elizabeth. 2006. High Tech Trash: Digital Devices, Hidden </p><p>Toxics, and Human Health. Washington, D. C.: Island Press.</p><p>Grubler, Arnulf. 2006. “Doing More With Less: Improving the </p><p>Environment Through Green Engineering.” Environment, March, 23-37.</p><p>Guha, Ramachandra. 2006. How Much Should a Person Consume? </p><p>Environmentalism in India and the United States. Berkeley, Calif.: </p><p>University of California Press. Hamilton, Clive, and Richard Denniss. 2006. Affluenza: When Too </p><p>Much is Never Enough. Sydney, Australia: Allen & Unwin. </p><p>Hammerslough, Jane. 2002. Dematerializing: Taming the Power of </p><p>Possessions. Cambridge, Mass.: Da Capo.</p><p>Harder, Jared, and Richar Rice. 2002. “Rethinking Green Consumerism.”</p><p>Scientific American, vol. 286, no. 5, 88.</p><p>Harmonious Technologies. 1995. Backyard Composting: Your Complete </p><p>Guide to Recycling Yard Clippings. Ojai, Calif.: Harmonious Technologies.</p><p>Harremoes, Paul, et al. 2002. 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