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Business and Environmental Risks [electronic resource] : Spatial Interactions Between Environmental Hazards and Social Vulnerabilities in Ibero-America / edited by Diego A. Vázquez-Brust, José A. Plaza-Úbeda, Jerónimo de Burgos-Jiménez, Claudia E. Natenzon.

Contributor(s): Publisher: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2012Description: XXVIII, 152 p. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9789400727427
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 338.927 23
LOC classification:
  • GE195-199
  • GE196
Online resources:
Contents:
Foreword -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Evaluating the Firm’s Environmental Risk: A Conceptual Framework -- 3. Statistical Information For the Analysis of Social Vulnerability in Latin America - Comparison With Spain -- 4. Evaluating the Firm’s Environmental Hazard: Methodology -- 5. The Case of Bolivia -- 6. The Case Of Argentina -- 7. The Case Of Spain -- 8. Concluding Remarks -- Index.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: Based on detailed research funded across two continents and involving universities in Argentina, Spain and the UK, this book sets out an innovative, multidisciplinary approach to assessing both environmental and social risks in a given territorial area. Using data from a number of Ibero-American nations, the study combines environmental, socio-economic and geographic factors to construct a set of spatial and technical indicators that measure the social vulnerability and industrial hazardousness of a defined area. Aggregating these indicators in a geographic information system (GIS) allows researchers to assess the potential risk to which a certain area and its population are subject as a result of the environmental deterioration caused by co-located industrial activity.   The authors perform this assessment at two levels: a regional one that identifies average risk over large administrative areas such as provinces, and at a more detailed scale they name the ‘census unit’, to determine the distribution in the locality of risk-laden and contaminating industries. The methodology applied allows for greater accuracy and detail in identifying geographical variations in calculating the levels of risk within a single country. It also facilitates more productive comparisons different countries in Ibero-America.
Item type: eBooks
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Foreword -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Evaluating the Firm’s Environmental Risk: A Conceptual Framework -- 3. Statistical Information For the Analysis of Social Vulnerability in Latin America - Comparison With Spain -- 4. Evaluating the Firm’s Environmental Hazard: Methodology -- 5. The Case of Bolivia -- 6. The Case Of Argentina -- 7. The Case Of Spain -- 8. Concluding Remarks -- Index.

Based on detailed research funded across two continents and involving universities in Argentina, Spain and the UK, this book sets out an innovative, multidisciplinary approach to assessing both environmental and social risks in a given territorial area. Using data from a number of Ibero-American nations, the study combines environmental, socio-economic and geographic factors to construct a set of spatial and technical indicators that measure the social vulnerability and industrial hazardousness of a defined area. Aggregating these indicators in a geographic information system (GIS) allows researchers to assess the potential risk to which a certain area and its population are subject as a result of the environmental deterioration caused by co-located industrial activity.   The authors perform this assessment at two levels: a regional one that identifies average risk over large administrative areas such as provinces, and at a more detailed scale they name the ‘census unit’, to determine the distribution in the locality of risk-laden and contaminating industries. The methodology applied allows for greater accuracy and detail in identifying geographical variations in calculating the levels of risk within a single country. It also facilitates more productive comparisons different countries in Ibero-America.

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