Search Books
Mergers and Acquisitions in… Resistance to the Shah: Lan…

Making Microchips: Policy, Globalization, and Economic Restructuring in the Semiconductor Industry (Urban and Industrial Environments)

Author Janice Mazurek
Publisher The MIT Press
Category Business & Economics
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
55.00 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $3.63

✓ Usually ships in 24 hours

Share:
Book Details
PublisherThe MIT Press
ISBN / ASIN0262133458
ISBN-139780262133456
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank3,142,289
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

In Making Microchips, Jan Mazurek examines the environmental and economic implications of the computer microchip industry's exodus from California's Silicon Valley to New Mexico, Virginia, Ireland, and Taiwan. Globalization, economic restructuring, and changing manufacturing processes in this rapidly growing industry present difficult new questions for environmental policy. Mazurek challenges the assumptions of U.S. policies designed to promote the competitiveness of domestic microchip makers. She argues that, although these initiatives focus on the economic effects of environmental regulation, they fail to acknowledge how economic and organizational changes within the industry collide with and often confound efforts to monitor and manage pollution from chemicals used in microchip manufacturing.Despite its reputation as a clean industry, microchip manufacturing is fraught with hazards. More than sixty dangerous acids, solvents, caustics, and gases are used to make microchips, and some of them are suspected to be carcinogens and/or reproductive toxins. Mazurek describes the environmental by-products of chipmaking, including soil contamination, air and water pollution, and damage to human health. Applying insights from economic geography to questions of how and where companies organize production, she shows how Silicon Valley played a pivotal role in the development of the microchip. Pairing federal environmental data with structural and geographic information on the six firms that continue to build wafer fabrication plants in the United States, she demonstrates how reorganization and relocation of manufacturing facilities divert attention from trends in toxic emissions and how they complicate public and private efforts to improve the industry's environmental performance. In the concluding chapter, Mazurek marshals her findings in a broader analysis of the expansion of global manufacturing and the resultant environmental problems.

Business Cycles and Forecasting
View
Development Economics: Its Position in the Present Sta…
View
Cost Systems Design
View
So You Want to Dance on Broadway
View
The Blueprint: Reviving Innovation, Rediscovering Risk…
View
Managing IT Outsourcing, Second Edition
View
Education and the Creation of Capital in the Early Ame…
View
Global Corruption Report 2005: Special Focus: Corrupti…
View
More Tales for Trainers: Using Stories and Metaphors t…
View