Cancer Factories: America's Tragic Quest for Uranium Self-Sufficiency
By (Author) Howard Ball
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
24th March 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Public health and preventive medicine
Oncology
Social law and Medical law
Citizenship and nationality law
363.17
Hardback
216
For the first time the sad story of America's uranium miners and the duplicity of the American government is revealed. This study examines, in microcosm, the political, legal, social, medical, engineering and ethical problems that emerged when American leaders developed a nuclear arsenal to contain the USSR without considering the cost this could have on innocent lives. Medical and public health personnel, policymakers and political scientists, lawyers and legal historians, and citizen watchdogs should find this account illuminating. Dr. Ball provides the context in the 1940s and 1950s for understanding the Communist hysteria that swept the country then and led policymakers to develop risky nuclear technology and to engage in uranium mining and production while assuring Navajo and Mormon miners of their safety. The study analyses the medical consequences and the aetiology of cancer among miners, the politics behind radioactive policy, the miners' long legal battles, and compensatory legislation in 1990. An appendix provides a federal report about three decades of radiation experiences on US citizens.
"The author argues convincingly that from the start U.S. authorities were aware of the risk to the miner's health...[and] skillfully documents the pathetic consequences of a government policy steeped in cynicism . . . . I know of no other book that explores in an overview the policy, health, and compensation perspective as this one does."-Leonard Cole Rutgers University
HOWARD BALL, Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences and Professor of Political Science and Public Administration at the University of Vermont, has written at length on public policy questions. His books include Of Power and Right (1992), We Have a Duty: The Watergate Tapes Litigation (Greenwood, 1990), Controlling Regulatory Sprawl: Presidential Strategies from Nixon to Reagan (Greenwood, 1984) and Justice Downwind: The American Atomic Testing Program in the 1950s (1988), among others.