RADIOACTIVE WASTE POLICIES AND SOCIAL PERCEPTION OF RISK IN TWO COMMUNITIES IN THE STATE OF MEXICO, MEXICO

Authors

  • Edgar Delgado Hernández
  • Paola María Sesia

Abstract

This article presents how people living in two communities adjacent to a radioactive waste repository in Mexico construct their perceptions of risk through embodied sensorial experiences, feelings of uncertainty and the spread of rumor. A four-month ethnographic fieldwork was carried out, with semi-structured interviews to key informants, the use of geographic information systems and official databases. We show how the social perception of risk and danger is produced based on an unequal power relationship between local, state and federal government institutions without a process of consensus building with the localities. On the contrary, the establishment and legitimization of the Radioactive Waste Storage Center (CADER) were construed on lies and unfulfilled promises of education and work opportunities for the communities.

KEYWORDS: Social perception of risk. Radioactive waste. Mexico. Capitalocene.

Image: Main façade of the Radioactive Storage and Waste Center (CADER). Source: Edgar Delgado Hernández.

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Author Biographies

Edgar Delgado Hernández

Doctorate at the Center for Research and Higher Studies in Social Anthropology, Western Unit (CIESAS-Mexico)

Paola María Sesia

Professor-Researcher at the Center for Research and Higher Studies in Social Anthropology, South Pacific Unit (CIESAS-Mexico)

Main façade of the Radioactive Storage and Waste Center (CADER). Source: Edgar Delgado Hernández.

Published

2023-10-27

Issue

Section

Dossier Anthropological Dialogues Brazil-Mexico: CIESAS - PPGA/UFPB