Examining the Association between Hazardous Waste Facilities and Rural "Brain Drain"

Authors: Hunter L.M.; Sutton J.

Source: Rural Sociology, Volume 69, Number 2, 1 June 2004 , pp. 197-212(16)

Publisher: Rural Sociological Society

Abstract:

Rural communities are increasingly being faced with the prospect of accepting facilities characterized as "opportunity-threat,"such as facilities that generate, treat, store, or otherwise dispose of hazardous wastes. Such facilities may offer economic gains through jobs and tax revenue, although they may also act as environmental "disamenities." This analysis examines the possibility that the presence of such facilities equates with lower loss of rural human capital, a question as yet unexamined on a national scale within the academic literature. Making use of secondary data from several different sources, we examine the association between age- and education-specific outmigration and 1) the number of hazardous waste facilities, 2) the number of large quantity hazardous waste generators, and 3) the number of hazardous waste landfills and incinerators across rural counties within the 48 contiguous states. Our findings suggest that the presence of hazardous waste facilities does not clearly equate with reductions in rural "brain drain."

Document Type: Research article

DOI: 10.1526/003601104323087570

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