Abstract

Public opinion poll data have consistently shown that the proportion of respondents who are willing to have a nuclear power plant in their own community is smaller than the proportion who agree that more nuclear plants should be built in this country. Respondents’ judgments of the minimum safe distance from each of eight hazardous facilities confirmed that this finding results from perceived risk gradients that differ by facility (e.g., nuclear vs. natural gas power plants) and social group (e.g., chemical engineers vs. environmentalists) but are relatively stable over time. Ratings of the facilities on thirteen perceived risk dimensions were used to determine whether any of the dimensions could explain the distance data. Because the rank order of the facilities with respect to acceptable distance was very similar to the rank order on a number of the perceived risk dimensions, it is difficult to determine which of the latter is the critical determinant of acceptable distance if, indeed, there is only one. There were, however, a number of reversals of rank order that indicate that the respondents had a differentiated view of technological risk. Finally, data from this and other studies were interpreted as suggesting that perceived lack of any other form of personal control over risk exposure may be an important factor in stimulating public opposition to the siting of hazardous facilities.

Keywords

Risk perceptionPublic opinionPerceptionNuclear powerHazardous wasteOpposition (politics)Order (exchange)Control (management)PsychologyBusinessSocial psychologyActuarial scienceMarketingEngineeringPolitical scienceEconomicsPoliticsLawEcology

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Publication Info

Year
1983
Type
article
Volume
3
Issue
4
Pages
245-253
Citations
155
Access
Closed

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Michael K. Lindell, Timothy C. Earle (1983). How Close Is Close Enough: Public Perceptions of the Risks of Industrial Facilities. Risk Analysis , 3 (4) , 245-253. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1539-6924.1983.tb01393.x

Identifiers

DOI
10.1111/j.1539-6924.1983.tb01393.x