4 research outputs found

    Genetic Monitoring in the Workplace: A Tool Not a Solution

    Get PDF
    The authors differentiate between genetic monitoring and screening, and discuss the potential risks and benefits of predictive testing technologies

    Traprock Workers: The Culture Of Work And Risk At An Underground Copper Mine, 1900-1945 (michigan).

    Full text link
    This study of work and occupational risk at a Michigan copper mine compares cultural history of underground mining, based on the historian's analysis of company documents and material culture, with present-day folk historical culture--the past as residents of a mining town remember it and tell it to an outsider. Contrary to the views expressed officially by the company and informally in some interviews, collective folk history and historical research indicate that mining remained dangerous work throughout the twentieth century. Some former employees of the Champion Mining Company in Painesdale, MI, express doubt that mine safety improved with the introduction of a company safety program. Others believe mining grew safer during the 1930s, though they continue to tell stories about worried miners and injured children. In this study, I examine the folk and formal versions of occupational culture and consider the varying degrees of authority with which representations of the past are invested by scholars, the company, and the community. The results show that the safety program succeeded in reducing accidents after the mid-1920s, but that fatalities continued to occur sporadically. The study concludes that management's concern for worker safety was less a reaction to the incidence of serious accidents or to workers' complaints than a reconceptualization of risk which resulted in improvement of the least serious conditions at the least cost and at a time of sagging profits. That improvement was accompanied by a rhetoric of safety which implied greater benefit to workers than was actually the case. The study further concludes that folk history kept communal memories of hardship and tragedy alive despite the success of the safety rhetoric in downplaying risk. Nonetheless, as doubts about the safety of mining became embedded in stories or softened by nostalgia for the industrial landscape over time, some workers grew more inclined to praise the company safety program than to question its benefits. Both conclusions support the claim that conditions of risk are socially constructed ideas as much as they are physical realities.Ph.D.American studiesFolkloreSocial SciencesUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/128039/2/8712223.pd

    Native Hawaiian ethnographic study for the Hawaii Geothermal Project proposed for Puna and Southeast Maui

    Get PDF
    Prepared for U.S. Department of Energy, Oak Ridge Operations Office by Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Report Number: ORNL/Sub--93-SN381; OSTI ID: 463547; Legacy ID: DE97051268; Other: ON: DE97051268This report makes available and archives the background scientific data and related information collected for an ethnographic study of selected areas on the islands of Hawaii and Maui. The task was undertaken during preparation of an environmental impact statement for Phases 3 and 4 of the Hawaii Geothermal Project (HGP) as defined by the state of Hawaii in its April 1989 proposal to Congress. Since the state of Hawaii is no longer pursuing or planning to pursue the HGP, DOE considers the project to be terminated. Information is included on the ethnohistory of Puna and southeast Maui; ethnographic fieldwork comparing Puna and southeast Maui; and Pele beliefs, customs, and practices.U.S. Department of EnergyDOE Contract Number AC05-96OR2246
    corecore