From wasteland to waste site: the role of discourse in nuclear power's environmental injustices |
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Authors: | Danielle Endres |
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Institution: | 1. Department of Communication , University of Utah , LNCO 2400, 255 S. Central Campus Dr., Salt Lake City, Utah, 84112, USA danielle.endres@utah.edu |
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Abstract: | The purpose of this essay is twofold. First, I examine interdisciplinary literature to reveal the environmental injustices associated with the front and back ends of nuclear power production in the USA – Uranium mining and high-level nuclear waste (HLW) storage. Second, I argue that the injustices associated with nuclear power are upheld, in part, through discourse. This essay examines how the term “wasteland” is invoked in relation to HLW waste storage in the USA and contributes to the discursive formation of nuclear colonialism. Examination of this discourse not only contributes to current literature on nuclear colonialism but also to environmental justice research by arguing for the importance of examining the discursive aspects of environmental injustices. Further, the essay adds to current scholarship in energy justice by highlighting the environmental injustices associated with nuclear power. |
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Keywords: | environmental justice nuclear power nuclear waste nuclear colonialism wasteland discursive formations |
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