Garbage In, Garbage Out:
Solving the Problems with Long-Distance Trash Transport |
| Vivian E. Thomason |
| 160 pages, 5 1/2x 81/4 |
| 9 b&w photographs, 7 figures, 6 tables |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2824-1 $49.50 |
| Paper ISBN 0-8139-2825-8 $21.50 |
 |
Your garbage is going places you’d never imagine. What
used to be sent to the local dump now may move hundreds of miles
by truck and barge to its final resting place. Virtually all forms
of pollution migrate, subjected to natural forces such as wind
and water currents. The movement of garbage, however, is under
human control. Its patterns of migration reveal much about power
sharing among state, local, and national institutions, about the
Constitution’s protection of trash transport as a commercial
activity, and about competing notions of social fairness. In Garbage
In, Garbage Out, Vivian Thomson looks at Virginia’s
status as the second-largest importer of trash in the United States
and uses it as a touchstone for exploring the many controversies
around trash generation and disposal.
Political conflicts over waste management have been felt at all
levels of government. Local governments who want to manage their
own trash have fought other local governments hosting huge landfills
that depend on trash generated hundreds of miles away. State governments
have tried to avoid becoming the dumping grounds for cities hundreds
of miles away. The constitutional questions raised in these battles
have kept interstate trash transport on Congress’s agenda
since the early 1990s. Whether the resulting legislative proposals
actually address our most critical garbage-related problems, however,
remains in question.
Thomson sheds much-needed light on these problems. Within the
context of increased interstate trash transport and the trend
toward privatization of waste management, she examines the garbage
issue from a number of perspectives--including the links between
environmental justice and trash management, a critical evaluation
of the theoretical and empirical relationship between economic
growth and environmental improvement, and highlighting the ways
in which waste management practices in the US differ from those
in the European Union and Japan. Thomson then provides specific,
substantive recommendations for our own policymakers.
Everything eventually becomes trash. As we explore the long,
often surprising, routes our garbage takes, we begin to understand
that it is something more than a mere nuisance that regularly
“disappears” from our curbside. Rather, trash generation
and management reflect patterns of consumption, political choices
over whether garbage is primarily pollution or commerce, the social
distribution of environmental risk, and how our daily lives compare
with those of our counterparts in other industrialized nations.
Vivian E. Thomson is Associate Professor
of Environmental Sciences and of Politics at the University of Virginia,
where she is Director of the Envoironmental Thought and Practice
program. She is also Vice Chair of the Virginia Air Pollution Control
Board.