Environmental risk assessment and public health impact of contaminated sites and economical implications

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2009

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Open Access Color

OpenAIRE Downloads

OpenAIRE Views

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Events

Abstract

Environment includes social, cultural, economic and political considerations, as well as the more usually understood features such as soil, climate and food supply. Notably, biological agents are sensitive to environmental conditions. To sum up, the relative ease and low cost of producing biological agents, the difficulties in detecting their presence and treating exposed victims and their potential will be used not only for humans but crops and livestock as well. In the future The terrorists probably being use biological agents in water resources and other environmental sites. This can be a negative impact on economies of the countries and on public health. International tourism is one of the world's largest industries and a major source for the economies of less developed and developing countries. But Terrorism can hurt easily the tourism sector by reducing tourist arrivals. Therefore, national policy makers and academics once treated bioterrorism as nothing more than a theoretical possibility. This paper will be an introductory text about the relationship that exists between environment, bioterrorism, tourism and economy. © 2009 All Rights Reserved by the International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference SGEM Printed in Sofia, Bulgaria.

Description

Keywords

Biological terrorism, Economical risks, Environmental risk, Tourism economy

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

Citation

WoS Q

Scopus Q

Source

9th International Multidicsciplinary Scientific Geoconference and EXPO - Modern Management of Mine Producing, Geology and Environmental Protection, SGEM 2009 -- 9th International Multidicsciplinary Scientific Geoconference and EXPO, SGEM 2009 -- 14 June 2009 through 19 June 2009 -- Albena -- 101472

Volume

2

Issue

Start Page

737

End Page

744