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In this book, the editors explore unconventional oil and gas production, earthquakes, and how they relate to the broader conversation centering on private property, energy production and the role of science within the public policy process. Utilizing a unique national-level dataset, the book tests a new model of event-driven policy change.
List of contents
Introduction. Chapter 1: Waste and the Governance of Oil and Gas. Chapter 2: Which Events Lead to Change? Chapter 3: The National Picture. Chapter 4: Oil and Gas Wastes in Ohio. Chapter 5: Oil and Gas Wastes in Oklahoma. Chapter 6: The Landscape Going Forward and Lessons Learned
About the author
Dr Zachary Mahafza is Research and Data Analyst at the Southern Poverty Law Center and Adjunct Instructor at Auburn University. He researches a wide range of environmental and public health topics often using geographical data. His published work has appeared in journals such as
State and Local Government Review,
Water Policy,
Politics and Policy,
INQUIRY: The Journal of Health Care Organization,
Provision, and Financing, and
Contemporary Rural Sociology.
Dr Jonathan M. Fisk is Associate Professor and Academic Program Director for the Master of Public Policy Program within the Division of Public Affairs at the University of Utah. He is the author of
Intergovernmental Relations: State and Local Challenges in the 21st Century (2022) and
The Fracking Debate: Intergovernmental Politics of the Oil and Gas Renaissance (2017) and coauthor of
The Shale Renaissance: How Fracking Changed Pennsylvania in the 21st Century (2022) and
The Drought Dilemma (2024). He has published more than 30 articles and chapters covering a wide range of energy and environmental topics in journals such as
American Review of Public Administration,
Energy Policy, and
State and Local Government Review.
Dr Joseph A. Aistrup is Professor of Political Science at Auburn University, and former Dean of the College of Liberal Arts. He is the co-author of
Kansas Politics and Government: The Clash of Political Cultures (2010) and author of
The Southern Strategy Revisited: Republican Top-Down Advancement in the South, which was nominated for the V.O. Key Award in 1997. He has published 67 peer-reviewed articles and professional publications in a wide variety of political science, public policy, and multidisciplinary journals, including
Political Research Quarterly,
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
Applied Geography and Social Science Quarterly.
Dr Lorraine W. Wolf, Emerita Professor of Geophysics in the Department of Geosciences at Auburn University, has applied a wide range of geophysical methodologies in her research, including crustal-scale magnetic and gravity modeling, deformation and fluid pressure modeling, seismic hazard analyses, and electrical resistance tomography. Wolf has published in a variety of national and international geophysical journals and assumed a primary editorial role in three books on geophysical data policy published by the National Research Council.