Showing posts with label Neighborhood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Neighborhood. Show all posts

In your neighborhood? WSJ lists locations of Cold War-era nuclear manufacturing and research sites

WSJ's John Emshwiller and Jeremy Singer-Vine detail their year-long investigation into the fate of hundreds of Cold War-era nuclear manufacturing and research sites. some of them near homes, parks and malls:



During the build-up to the Cold War, the U.S. government called upon hundreds of factories and research centers to help develop nuclear weapons and other forms of atomic energy. At many sites, this work left behind residual radioactive contamination requiring government cleanups, some of which are still going on.

The Department of Energy says it has protected the public health, and studies about radiation harm aren’t definitive. But with the government's own records about many of the sites unclear, the Journal has compiled a database that draws on thousands of public records and other sources to trace this historic atomic development effort and its consequences.

Find out if there is a former nuclear site in your neighborhood on the map here:

http://projects.wsj.com/waste-lands/state/IL

References:

http://projects.wsj.com/waste-lands
Neighborhood Determinants of Quality of Life - street lighting,
sidewalks, trees, absence of air or noise pollution

Neighborhood Determinants of Quality of Life - street lighting, sidewalks, trees, absence of air or noise pollution

This paper analyzed quality of life in Uruguay. Differences in overall happiness can be explained by access to public goods.

Neighborhood Determinants of Quality of Life included:

- access to electricity, running water, sewage system, drainage, waste disposal system
- street lighting
- sidewalks in good condition
- trees in the street - "forest bathing" (exposure to parks and forests) may increase immunity
- absence of air or noise pollution


Based on research, Mike Cadogan summarized happiness in just 4 ideas - repeat every morning: "I'm happy, I'm hopeful about the future, I enjoy life, and I feel I'm just as good as other people."

References:

Neighborhood Determinants of Quality of Life. Néstor Gandelman, Giorgina Piani and Zuleika Ferre. Journal of Happiness Studies, 2011.
Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.