34 results on '"Prior, Jason"'
Search Results
2. Toxic torts as compensation: Legal geographies of environmental contamination litigation.
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Legg, Rupert and Prior, Jason
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TORTS , *HAZARDOUS waste sites , *CLASS actions , *ACTIONS & defenses (Law) , *FLUOROALKYL compounds , *GEOGRAPHY - Abstract
Residents living in close proximity to contaminated sites may experience adverse effects from financial losses and property devaluation, leading to poor mental health and physical illnesses—effects that may require compensation. The most common legal process of seeking compensation is the toxic tort—litigation pressed on the basis that contamination has harmed the victims. Several recent toxic tort class actions in Australia brought by residents living in areas affected by contamination from per‐ and poly‐fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) exemplify that process. Two such actions, those at Williamtown and Richmond, provide an opportunity to explore how toxic torts currently function as a means to secure compensation, whether they mitigate the harms of the contamination and considering how spatio‐legal manoeuvres may shape the litigation. In this article, we use a legal geography approach to analyse how plaintiffs' bodies, litigants' properties, and the state are constructed and represented by parties involved in these toxic torts. Legal geographers contend that examining the spatio‐legal manoeuvres made via litigation can make visible the effects of legal action on those involved and draw out how the law and its instruments may shape places and communities. Toxic tort class actions have allowed those affected by the contamination to be heard and receive some compensation. However, we argue that they do little to alleviate plaintiffs' concerns about the effects of contamination on their health, properties, and the environment. The findings have significance given that torts will likely play an increasingly prominent role in dealing with such challenges. This article examines a recent series of toxic tort class actions brought by residents living in areas affected by contamination from per‐ and poly‐fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in New South Wales, Australia. It explores in particular how the torts function as a form of compensation for those affected by the contamination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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3. Assessing the impact of sporting mega-events on the social and physical capital of communities in host cities: the Gold Coast 2018 Commonwealth Games experience.
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Falla, Michael, Prior, Jason, and Jacobs, Brent
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COMMUNITIES , *SOCIAL capital , *SPECIAL events , *BOWLS (Game) , *SOCIAL impact , *SOCIAL norms - Abstract
Over the past decade there has been increasing research on how sporting mega-events such as the Olympic and Commonwealth Games are developing strategies, norms and rules to govern how they impact the host nation, city and communities, and in particular their impacts on economic, social, physical, human and cultural capital. This paper addresses a gap within these interconnected fields by examining how the strategies, norms and rules used to govern a mega-event may impact the social and physical capitals of communities in the host city during and following a mega-event. These associations are revealed through a novel methodology that combines the Institutional Grammar Tool developed by Crawford and Ostrom and the Community Capitals Framework devised by Flora and Flora, to analyse policy documentation, complemented by 11 in-depth interviews on the refurbishment of the Broadbeach Lawn Bowls Club as a venue for the 2018 Commonwealth Games in the City of Gold Coast, Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. Halfway Around The World, Echoes Of Physician Moral Injury.
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PRIOR, JASON
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BETRAYAL , *PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout , *ETHICS , *PHYSICIANS' attitudes , *CONFLICT (Psychology) , *ORGANIZATIONAL change , *HEALTH attitudes , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *CORPORATE culture - Abstract
In the article, the author discusses the issues in the healthcare system in the U.S. and around the world by presenting his experiences as a physician in Washington, D.C. and New Zealand. He claims that the alleged injustice in the U.S. care delivery system prompted him to practice hospital medicine in New Zealand. He cites issues in the system like insurance denials and prior authorization issues.
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- 2022
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5. Planetary Health challenges a hub for transdisciplinary collaborations and sustainable development.
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Ibrahim, Umar and Prior, Jason
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SUSTAINABLE development , *SCIENTIFIC method , *MEDICAL sciences , *SUSTAINABLE urban development , *TRANSGENDER people - Published
- 2023
6. A geography of residents' worry about the disruptive effects of contaminated sites.
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Prior, Jason Hugh, Gorman‐Murray, Andrew, McIntyre, Erica, Connon, Irena, Adams, Jon, and Madden, Ben
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RESIDENTS , *GEOGRAPHY , *HAZARDOUS waste sites , *WELL-being , *HEALTH - Abstract
While the links between contaminated sites and adverse effects on human health and well‐being are being increasingly recognised, some argue that the magnitude of the health problem is inadequately addressed because it is largely invisible. Health geographies literature has sought to highlight this invisibility by focusing on the link between contaminated sites and health. This study adds to health geographies by presenting unique insights into the geography of residents' worry about the disruptive effect of environmental contamination on health and well‐being. It analyses a sample of residents (n = 485) living near 13 contaminated sites across Australia. Ordinal logistic regression analysis of closed‐format survey questions was combined with coding of open‐ended survey questions to reveal the geography of residents' worry about contamination from nearby sites. First, the study explores some of the main relationships between residents, their environs, and contaminants from nearby source sites, which determines their levels of worry: residents' demographics, residents' proximity to sites, contaminant boundaries and borders, and type of contaminant. Second, the study investigates how worry affects residents' health and well‐being, ranging from effects on their personal functioning through to their sense of ontological security, which depends in part upon their perceptions of contaminants' impacts. Despite having identified a range of diverse and negative effects of worry about contamination on residents, we found that worry for contamination can also prompt coping strategies and problem‐solving, reinforcing the need for more research on this subject. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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7. Sociodemographic predictors of residents worry about contaminated sites.
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McIntyre, Erica, Prior, Jason, Connon, Irena L.C., Adams, Jon, and Madden, Ben
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HAZARDOUS waste site remediation , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *GROUNDWATER pollution , *HYDROCARBONS , *POLLUTANTS - Abstract
Abstract The management and remediation of contaminated environments increasingly involves engagement with affected local residents. Of late, risk communication tools and guidelines have drawn attention to the stress and concern of residents as a result of heightened awareness of localised contamination and the need to address these less visible impacts of contamination when engaging with affected communities. Despite this emerging focus, there is an absence of research exploring the factors that predict resident worry about neighbourhood contamination. This paper aims to address this shortcoming by drawing on data from a cross-sectional survey of 2009 adult residents in neighbourhoods near 13 contaminated sites across Australia. Analyses used ordered logistic regression to determine the sociodemographic, environmental, and knowledge-based factors that influence residents' degree of worry. The findings suggest age, gender and income significantly affect residents' degree of worry. Being knowledgeable about the contaminant was associated with lower degrees of worry. Conversely, having a stronger sense of place within a neighbourhood predicted higher degrees of worry. Type of contaminant also impacted resident worry, with residents being less likely to worry about hydrocarbon, asbestos and waste than other types of contaminants. Our analyses suggest resident worry can be reduced through improving access to accurate information and the development of specific risk reduction strategies tailored to each neighbourhood and aimed at the heterogeneous distribution of worry amongst residential populations. Graphical abstract Unlabelled Image Highlights • Framework for understanding residents' worry about neighbourhood contamination • Details diverse factors, including contaminant types, which affect residents' worry • Provides insights through a survey of 2009 residents living near 13 contaminated sites • Details how residents' worries can be used to enhance contaminated site management [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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8. Factors influencing residents' acceptance (support) of remediation technologies.
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Prior, Jason
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HAZARDOUS waste sites , *HAZARDOUS waste site remediation , *BIOREMEDIATION , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
An increasing diversity of technologies are being used to remediate contaminated sites, yet there remains little understanding of the level of acceptance that residents living near these sites hold for these technologies, and what factors influence their level of acceptance. This lack of understanding hinders the remediation industry's ability to effectively engage with these residents about remediation technology selection, at a time when such engagement is become part and parcel of remediation policy and practice. The study develops on wider research into public acceptance of technologies, using data from a telephone survey of 2009 residents living near thirteen contaminated sites across Australia. Within the survey acceptance is measured through residents' level of support for the application of remediation technologies in their local area. Firstly, a regression analysis of closed-ended questions, and coding of open-ended questions are combined to identify the main predictors of residents' support for remediation technologies. Secondly, coding of open-ended questions was analysed using Crawford and Ostrom's Institutional Grammar Tool to identify norms and sanctions guiding residents' willingness to negotiate their support. The research identifies factors associated with the residents' personal and demographic characteristics, their physical context and engagement with institution during remediation processes, and the technologies themselves which predict residents' level of support for the application of remediation technologies. Bioremediation technologies had higher levels of support than chemical, thermal and physical technologies. Furthermore, the paper identifies a core set of norms and sanctions residents use to negotiate their level of support for remediation technologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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9. Law, pliability and the multicultural city: Documenting planning law in action.
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Hubbard, Phil and Prior, Jason
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MULTICULTURALISM , *LAND use , *GEOGRAPHY , *URBAN planning - Abstract
In this paper we focus on the deployment of certain techniques that are central to municipal law’s attempt to impose order on the city, namely, development control, zoning, and change of use regulation. Drawing on the notion of inter-legality, we argue that such practices can never be consistent or universal, and instead need to be sufficiently pliable to recognise the diversity of legal norms, assumptions and practices evident in a multicultural city. We demonstrate this with reference to the resolution of urban land-use conflict in Sydney (Australia) showing how planning decisions have need to demonstrate flexibility within the law to achieve outcomes that are sensitive to local contingency and informed by notions of spatial justice. In conclusion we suggest that attempts to make municipal law more consistent or unified are problematic given situated discretion is required to produce cities more open to difference and diversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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10. Engaging with residents' perceived risks and benefits about technologies as a way of resolving remediation dilemmas.
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Prior, Jason and Rai, Tapan
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PHYTOREMEDIATION , *PERCEIVED benefit , *HEALTH risk assessment , *ENVIRONMENTAL remediation , *BIOREMEDIATION - Abstract
In recent decades the diversity of remediation technologies has increased significantly, with the breadth of technologies ranging from dig and dump to emergent technologies like phytoremediation and nanoremediation. The benefits of these technologies to the environment and human health are believed to be substantial. However, they also potentially constitute risks. Whilst there is a growing body of knowledge about the risks and benefits of these technologies from the perspective of experts, little is known about how residents perceive the risks and benefits of the application of these technologies to address contaminants in their local environment. This absence of knowledge poses a challenge to remediation practitioners and policy makers who are increasingly seeking to engage these affected local residents in choosing technology applications. Building on broader research into the perceived benefits and risks of technologies, and data from a telephone survey of 2009 residents living near 13 contaminated sites in Australia, regression analysis of closed-ended survey questions and coding of open-ended questions are combined to identify the main predictors of resident's perceived levels of risk and benefit to resident's health and to their local environment from remediation technologies. This research identifies a range of factors associated with the residents' physical context, their engagement with institutions during remediation processes, and the technologies which are associated with residents' level of perceived risk and benefit for human health and the local environment. The analysis found that bioremediation technologies were perceived as less risky and more beneficial than chemical, thermal and physical technologies. The paper also supports broader technology research that reports an inverse correlation between levels of perceived risks and benefits. In addition, the paper reveals the types of risks and benefits to human health and the local environment that residents most commonly associate with remediation technologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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11. Time, space, and the authorisation of sex premises in London and Sydney.
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Prior, Jason and Hubbard, Phil
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MUNICIPAL ordinances , *CITIES & towns , *SEX industry , *GOVERNMENT policy , *SOCIAL history - Abstract
While the regulation of commercial sex in the city has traditionally involved formal policing, recent shifts in many jurisdictions have seen sex premises of various kinds granted formal recognition via planning, licensing and environmental control. This means that 'sexual entertainment venues', 'brothels' and 'sex shops' are now not just labels applied to particular types of premises, but formal categories of legal land use. However, these categories are not clear-cut, and it is not simply the case that changes in the law instantiate a change whereby these premises are brought into being at a particular point in time. Countering the privileging of space over time that is apparent within much contemporary research on sex and the city, this paper foregrounds the varied temporalities in play here, and describes how the actions of those policy-makers, municipal bureaucrats and officers allow sex premises to variously 'fade in', accelerate, linger, or disappear as legal land uses within the city. We examine the implications of these different temporalities of the law by exploring how sex premises have been subject to regulation in London and Sydney, showing that the volatile, contradictory and fractured nature of legal space-making does not necessarily provide the certainty sought by the law but produces overlapping and contested understandings of what types of premises should be subject to regulation. More broadly the paper highlights how attention to the contingency and complexity of municipal law can help us better understand the ways that commercial sex is differently manifest in different cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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12. Using residents' worries about technology as a way of resolving environmental remediation dilemmas.
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Prior, Jason, Hubbard, Phil, and Rai, Tapan
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ENVIRONMENTAL remediation , *HAZARDOUS waste sites , *DATA analysis , *GEOLOGICAL surveys , *BIOTECHNOLOGY - Abstract
The choice of technologies used to remediate contaminated environments are increasingly made via engagement with affected local residents. Despite this, little is known about how residents perceive remediation technology applications. Building on the findings of broader technology worry research, and drawing on data from a telephone survey of 2009 residents living near thirteen contaminated sites in Australia, regression analysis of closed-ended survey questions and coding analysis of open-ended survey questions are combined to identify the main predictors of worries concerning particular remediation technologies, and how worry affects them. This suggests respondents are more worried about the application of chemical remediation technologies than the application of physical and thermal technologies, which in turn caused more worry than the application of biotechnology. The paper suggests that these worries can be reduced via direct engagement with residents about remediation technologies, suggesting that such engagement can provide knowledge that improves remediation technology decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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13. Shooting up illicit drugs with God and the State: the legal-spatial constitution of Sydney's Medically Supervised Injecting Centre as a sanctuary.
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Prior, Jason and Crofts, Penny
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CIVIL disobedience , *DRUGS of abuse , *LAW & geography , *GOD , *JURISDICTION , *CATHOLIC Christian sociology - Abstract
In 1999, the Uniting Church opened a Medically Supervised Injecting Centre (MSIC) at the Wayside Chapel in the inner Sydney suburb of Kings Cross. The Uniting Church justified this overt act of civil disobedience against the State's prohibitionist model of drug usage by invoking the ancient right of sanctuary. This invocation sought to produce a specific sort of spatialisation wherein the meaning of the line constituting sanctuary effects a protected 'inside' governed by God's word - civitas dei - 'outside' the jurisdiction of state power in civitas terrena. Sanctuary claims a territory exempt from other jurisdictions. The modern assertion of sanctuary enacts in physical space the relationship between state and religious authorities and the integration and intersections of civitas terrena and civitas dei. This article draws upon conceptions of sanctuary at the intersection of the Catholic Christianity tradition and the State since medieval times to analyse the contemporary space of sanctuary in the MSIC, exploring the shifting and ambiguous boundaries in material, legislative, and symbolic spaces. We argue that even though the MSIC has now been incorporated into civitas terrena, it remains and enacts a space of sanctuary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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14. The norms, rules and motivational values driving sustainable remediation of contaminated environments: A study of implementation.
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Prior, Jason
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SUSTAINABLE development , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *GROUNDWATER pollution , *ENVIRONMENTAL economics , *ENVIRONMENTAL remediation - Abstract
Efforts to achieve sustainability are transforming the norms, rules and values that affect the remediation of contaminated environments. This is altering the ways in which remediation impacts on the total environment. Despite this transformation, few studies have provided systematic insights into the diverse norms and rules that drive the implementation of sustainable remediation at contaminated sites, and no studies have investigated how values motivate compliance with these norms and rules. This study is a systematic analysis of the rules, norms and motivational values embedded in sustainable remediation processes at three sites across Australia, using in-depth interviews conducted with 18 participants between 2011 and 2014, through the application of Crawford and Ostrom's Institutional Grammar and Schwartz's value framework. These approaches offered methods for identifying the rules, norms, and motivational values that guided participants' actions within remediation processes at these sites. The findings identify a core set of 16 norms and 18 rules (sanctions) used by participants to implement sustainable remediation at the sites. These norms and rules: define the position of participants within the process, provide means for incorporating sustainability into established remediation practices, and define the scope of outcomes that constitute sustainable remediation. The findings revealed that motivational values focused on public interest and self-interest influenced participants' compliance with norms and rules. The findings also found strong interdependence between the norms and rules (sanctions) within the remediation processes and the normative principles operating within the broader domain of environmental management and planning. The paper concludes with a discussion of: the system of norms operating within sustainable remediation (which far exceed those associated with ESD); their link, through rules (sanctions) to contemporary styles of regulatory enforcement; and the underlying balance of public-interest values and self-interest values that drives participants' involvement in sustainable remediation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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15. Amongst the Ruins.
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Prior, Jason
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PSYCHOLOGY of gay men , *MODERN ruins , *IDENTITY (Psychology) , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Through the reflections of interviewees from New York, Montreal, and Sydney, this article investigates the affective qualities of urban ruins and the role they have played in gay male experience and identity construction from 1970 to 2000. Along with other places on the margins of regulated space, urban ruins operate as points of transition—passages from reason to myth at the interstices of ordered urban space. The article argues that the sensual feelings and memories conjured by these ruins enable alternative modes of being for gay men that stand in contrast to the more regimented modes of everyday life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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16. Industrial ecology and carbon property rights.
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Giurco, Damien, Prior, Jason, and Boydell, Spike
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CARBON offsetting , *INDUSTRIAL ecology , *REGIONAL planning , *CARBON cycle , *SUSTAINABLE development , *EMISSIONS (Air pollution) - Abstract
This paper examines the potential for property rights in carbon to affect industrial ecology opportunities. Given that emissions trading schemes for greenhouse gases are becoming more widely implemented, the definition of the carbon property right can affect barriers and opportunities for industrial ecology, alongside other factors. The paper uses legislation for emissions trading in Australia and two possible scenarios for the future of energy generation in the Latrobe Valley, Australia in 2050 as an illustrative case study to identify issues for industrial ecology arising from ill-defined carbon property rights. Currently, electricity generation in the region is reliant on coal-based generators. Scenario one focuses on bio-industries and renewables with no coal usage; and scenario two focuses on electricity from coal with carbon capture and storage resulting in moderate to high coal use. If a carbon property right for soil carbon emerges before a property right for subterranean carbon, then bio-based industrial ecology opportunities could be enabled ahead of a regional symbiosis involving carbon capture and storage. A generalised framework for considering the intersection of industrial ecology and carbon property rights is presented with a focus on tensions in: contributing to sustainable development, system boundaries and finally exchange mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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17. Planning, Law, and Sexuality: Hiding Immorality in Plain View.
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PRIOR, JASON, CROFTS, PENNY, and HUBBARD, PHIL
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STRATEGIC planning , *BROTHELS , *IMMORALITY , *GOVERNMENTALITY , *PROXIMITY spaces , *CITIES & towns in art - Abstract
Emerging research in sexuality and space outlines the diverse forms of spatial governmentality used to discipline non-normative sexual behaviours, exploring how exclusion, concealment, and repression combines to ensure that 'immoral' sexualities are out of the sight of the 'moral majority'. In this paper, we explore this contention in relation to planning for sex service premises (brothels) in New South Wales, Australia. Though such sex service premises are now legal, our analysis nonetheless considers the way that these premises have been subject to forms of planning constraint that reflect planners' assumptions about the appropriate manifestation of sex premises within the urban landscape. By exposing the assumptions written into planning law that sex premises are legal but potentially disorderly, we demonstrate the evidential power of planning to reinforce dominant moral geographies through instruments which, at first glance, appear to be focused on objective questions of amenity and the 'best use of land'. This paper hence explores the ways in which planners have translated assumptions of disorder into categories of visibility and distance, meaning that brothels have become hidden in plain view so as not to disturb the integrity of residential 'family' spaces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
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18. Sex Worker Victimization, Modes of Working, and Location in New South Wales, Australia: A Geography of Victimization.
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Prior, Jason, Hubbard, Phil, and Birch, Philip
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SEX workers , *VICTIMIZATION rates , *SEX work , *CONCEALMENT (Criminal law) , *SEX crimes - Abstract
This article examines the association among victimization, modes of sex working, and the locations used by sex workers through an analysis of “Ugly Mug” reports detailing 528 crime acts in 333 reported incidents in New South Wales (NSW), Australia. These forms, voluntarily lodged between 2000 and 2008 by members of NSW's estimated 10,000 sex worker population, suggest that street-based work has a higher victimization rate than other modes of working, including escort work, work in commercial premises, and private work. Although this ostensibly supports the commonly held view that “outdoor” working is more dangerous than “indoor” work, this analysis suggests that most instances of victimization actually occur in private spaces. Hence, it is argued that risks of victimization in sex work are influenced by a variety of environmental characteristics relating to concealment, control, and isolation, suggesting that not all off-street locations are equally safe. We conclude with recommendations for policy regarding sex work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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19. Out of sight, out of mind? Prostitution policy and the health, well-being and safety of home-based sex workers.
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Hubbard, Phil and Prior, Jason
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SEX work laws , *EXECUTIVES , *INDUSTRIAL hygiene , *INDUSTRIAL safety , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *SEX work , *STATISTICAL sampling , *GOVERNMENT policy , *HOME environment , *WELL-being - Abstract
Policy discussions relating to the selling of sex have tended to fixate on two spaces of sex work: the street and the brothel. Such preoccupation has arguably eclipsed discussion of the working environment where most sex is sold, namely, the private home. Redressing this omission, this paper discusses the public health and safety implications of policies that fail to regulate or assist the ‘hidden population’ of sex workers, focusing on the experiences of home-based workers in Sydney, Australia. Considering the inconsistent way that Home Occupation Sex Services Premises (HOSSPs) are regulated in this city, this paper discusses the implications of selling sex beyond the gaze of the state and the law. It is concluded that working from home can allow sex workers to exercise considerable autonomy over their working practices, but that the safety of such premises must be carefully considered in the development of prostitution policy. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2013
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20. Effects of sex premises on neighbourhoods: Residents, local planning and the geographies of a controversial land use.
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Prior, Jason and Crofts, Penny
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LAND use , *RESIDENTS , *GEOGRAPHY , *GEOGRAPHERS - Abstract
The paper examines 284 resident submissions to sex premises planning processes, and a survey of 401 residents living near sex premises in New South Wales, Australia, to investigate resident concerns about the effect of sex premises on local environs, and how these concerns inform resident views on the spatial ordering of sex premises. The investigation found that there was a discrepancy between the views of the broader residential population and the views of participants in planning processes. The investigation suggests that geographers need to consider more deeply the connections between residents, planning and the geographies of this controversial land use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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21. Nocturnal Rights to the City: Property, Propriety and Sex Premises in Inner Sydney.
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Prior, Jason, Boydell, Spike, and Hubbard, Philip
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SEX industry , *PROPERTY rights , *RIGHT of privacy , *URBAN policy , *PUBLIC spaces ,AUSTRALIAN politics & government - Abstract
Questions of property rights are central to the organisation of urban space yet remain weakly theorised in the context of sexuality. Tracing battles over spaces of commercial sex in inner Sydney, this paper argues that particular claims to privacy and property underpin exclusionary actions restricting the boundaries of sexual citizenship. However, the paper also notes the potential for the emergence of ‘sexual commons’ where claims to an enhanced notion of sexual citizenship can be made. The paper concludes that property rights consist of overlapping and complex claims to space in which questions of sexuality and the sanctity of family life are often brought to the fore. In arguing this, the paper demonstrates that property rights constitute a key mechanism in the management and regulation of the (nocturnal) city. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2012
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22. Social Capital, Local Communities and Culture-led Urban Regeneration Processes:, The Sydney Olympic Park Experience.
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Prior, Jason and Blessi, Giorgio Tavano
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SOCIAL capital , *PUBLIC investments , *COMMUNITY development , *SOCIAL impact , *WASTE lands ,SYDNEY Olympic Park (Sydney, N.S.W.) - Abstract
Culture has become increasingly important in regeneration processes designed to deal with urban futures. Urban regeneration processes in which culture has played a prominent role range from large-scale public investments in cultural facilities and artefacts as 'hallmarks' of urban regeneration projects (e.g. Guggenheim Bilbao), through to the use of 'one shot' cultural events such as the Olympic Games as a catalyst and engine for regenerating urban areas. The aim of this paper is to examine the association between social capital (SC), local communities and the culture-led regeneration process at Sydney Olympic Park (SOP), New South Wales, Australia. The catalyst for the transformation of an industrial wasteland into SOP was the awarding of the Olympics to Sydney in 1993. A convenience sample of 47 professional reports associated with the regeneration process at SOP between 1993 and 2010 were analyzed, the aim being to understand how local communities had been linked to the regeneration process through SC. Results from the analysis identified three principal associations between SC, local communities and the ongoing SOP regeneration process. The first association related to how, during the early years of the regeneration process, SC was used as a means of expressing concern about how governance mechanisms implemented at SOP might adversely impact the ability of local communities to engage in decision making that affected their local environment. The second related to the use of community development programs to build SC in local communities through the SOP development. The third related to a call for the development of measures to understand how the development of SOP impacts on the SC in local communities. Eight in-depth interviews with professionals involved in the regeneration process were used to provide further insights into the three principal associations. The paper discusses findings through reference to broader arguments surrounding the potential, capacity and nature of SC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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23. Home Occupation or Brothel? Selling Sex from Home in New South Wales.
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Crofts, Penny and Prior, Jason
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BROTHELS , *HUMAN sexuality , *SEX workers , *EXPLOITATION of humans - Abstract
This article engages with the question of whether or not sex work in the home should be regulated in the same way as large commercial brothels or as home occupations. Underlying concerns about sex services premises generally are that they are criminogenic, disorderly and exploitative of women. This article draws upon original research of surveys of people living in the vicinity of sex services premises, interviews with sex workers and service providers, and council records of complaint to argue that, on the contrary, home occupations (sex services) can operate lawfully with minimal amenity impacts, and that this type of business can provide a positive work environment. We recommend that sex work in the home in New South Wales should be regulated in the same way as other home occupations. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2012
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24. The emergence of community strategic planning in New South Wales, Australia: Influences, challenges and opportunities.
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Prior, Jason and Herriman, Jade
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STRATEGIC planning , *LOCAL government , *STATE governments , *ECONOMIC sectors - Abstract
This paper investigates the emergence of community strategic planning in the New South Wales (NSW) local government sector, against the backdrop of a series of broad influences ranging from increased interest in participatory democracy through to sustainable infrastructure provision. It provides an understanding of how community strategic planning has evolved over the past few decades to embody these influences. The paper concludes with reflections on some common challenges and opportunities experienced by localcouncils in NSW that have undertaken voluntary community strategic planning or are in the process of developing community strategic plans. Given underlying similarities in the emergence of participatory long-term strategic planningin local government around the world, many of the experiences associated with the preparation of community strategic plans in the NSW context are likely to be of relevance to those undertaking similar processes in other jurisdictions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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25. Spiritual Dimensions of Self-Transformation in Sydney's Gay Bathhouses.
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Prior, Jason and Cusack, CaroleM.
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RELIGIOUS life of gay men , *GAY bathhouses , *SPIRITUALITY , *SELF-efficacy , *SEXUAL freedom , *HOMOSEXUALITY , *GAY men's identity , *HISTORY , *RELIGION - Abstract
Interview-based research among patrons and proprietors of Sydney's gay bathhouses, asking about experiences of homosexual being from the 1960s to the early 1980s generated intriguing findings. Despite the apparent disconnect between traditional religious affiliation and the outlaw gay lifestyle of the bathhouses, a majority of interviewees asserted that spirituality and self-transformation was as important to them as sexual exploration and liberation from societal restraints (both as motivations for and outcomes of the bathhouse experience). Some of those interviewed adhered to mainstream religion (including Christianity and Judaism), but a significant number expressed a commitment to eclectic, personalized spiritual paths. Interestingly, both groups described the bathhouses as “churches” and “temples,” the activities that took place there as both collective and individual “rituals,” and attributed their spiritual growth and development to their experiences in the bathhouses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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26. Planning for Sex in the City: urban governance, planning and the placement of sex industry premises in inner Sydney.
- Author
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Prior, Jason
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URBAN planning , *MUNICIPAL government , *MUNICIPAL corporations , *SEX industry , *ORDER , *ORDERLINESS , *GAY bathhouses , *BATHHOUSES - Abstract
Much recent scholarship on sexuality and urban spaces has focused on forms of urban governance. Within this literature an emerging body of work has begun to highlight how formal urban planning processes and regulations are increasingly used as mechanisms to govern sexuality within later 20th century Western cities, particularly through the placement of sex industry premises. This paper contributes to this literature through a case study of the emergence of gay bathhouses in land-use planning process within inner Sydney during this period. It highlights how the placement of these businesses within Sydney depends on a broad range of shifting and competing discourses on how sex industry premises impact upon the amenity of the city, its neighbourhoods and land uses—that is, their secondary impacts, cumulative effects, and contribution to urban ordering. On one hand, planning processes reveal ideas about how these establishments contaminate and pollute neighbourhoods and sensitive land uses such as schools or churches. On the other, there are also emerging arguments that sex industry premises such as gay bathhouses can improve the health and lifestyle opportunities for specific communities and residents within particular city environs. I argue that these latter positive discourses have guided the placement of gay bathhouses within the planning of Sydney over the last few decades. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Ritual, Liminality and Transformation: secular spirituality in Sydney's gay bathhouses.
- Author
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Prior, Jason and Cusack, CaroleM.
- Subjects
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HISTORY of religion , *SOCIAL life & customs of gay people , *GAY bathhouses , *SOCIAL life & customs of LGBTQ+ people , *EQUALITY , *LIMINALITY , *RITUAL , *TWENTIETH century - Abstract
In the twentieth century religion was radically transformed, as the sacred uncoupled from the institutional Churches. This enabled the sacred to be experienced through what were previously 'secular' activities, including sport, rock music, psychoanalysis and sexuality. Individualism and prosperity combined to encourage a focus on personal transformation as the primary religious process. The 1960s also saw calls for self-determination and equality for previously oppressed groups—women, blacks and gays. This paper uses the model of secular ritual and Victor Turner's concept of liminality to investigate the role that the gay bathhouses had in enabling gay men to experience the sacred and to transform themselves. This paper is grounded in empirical research on Sydney's gay bathhouses that sheds light on rites of passage, the role of pleasure and its relationship to religious ecstasy, and the development of a specifically gay askesis (way of becoming). It is also argued that the gay bathhouse is a crucial transformative space for all those men who were its initiates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Bringing History Forward: Learning from Historical Context when Translating Contemporary Health Evidence into Planning Practice.
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Paine, Greg, Thompson, Susan, Prior, Jason, Connon, Irena, and Kent, Jennifer L.
- Subjects
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BEST practices - Abstract
We describe an historical review of planning documents related to a newly developing high-density locality in Sydney, Australia. The review was undertaken to support the translational component of a larger project investigating how best to include knowledge and experience from the health disciplines to ensure a way of living not hitherto commonplace in Australia is also health-supportive. This article presents (i) key findings from the historical data; (ii) associated learnings about practice, developed to assist the wider translational objectives; and (iii) observations on the potential for such historical reviews to inform better planning practice more broadly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Evaluating residents' preferences for remediation technologies: A choice experiment approach.
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Huynh, Elisabeth, Araña, Jorge E., and Prior, Jason
- Subjects
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ENVIRONMENTAL remediation , *DISCRETE choice models , *CONSUMER behavior , *BIOREMEDIATION , *INDUSTRIAL contamination - Abstract
The choice of technologies used to remediate contaminated environments is increasingly made through engagement with a multitude of stakeholders including affected residents. Despite this, little is known about how residents perceive remediation technology applications. In this study a choice experiment is designed to explore ways of understanding and measuring residents' preferences for different remediation technologies approaches using a sample of 944 residents in New South Wales, Australia. Analysis reveals that the residents' acceptability of remediation technologies can be explained by both the efficacy of the technology in improving the environmental quality of the community, and the reputational value of the technology. In particular it is found that residents prefer Monitor Natural Attenuation and Bioremediation to other remediation technologies. In particular they are willing to pay an increase in yearly taxes of $44.60 and $41.15 respectively for implementing such technologies instead of alternative remediation technologies like Chemical remediation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Respiratory pandemics, urban planning and design: A multidisciplinary rapid review of the literature.
- Author
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Harris, Patrick, Harris-Roxas, Ben, Prior, Jason, Morrison, Nicky, McIntyre, Erica, Frawley, Jane, Adams, Jon, Bevan, Whitney, Haigh, Fiona, Freeman, Evan, Hua, Myna, Pry, Jennie, Mazumdar, Soumya, Cave, Ben, Viliani, Francesca, and Kwan, Benjamin
- Abstract
COVID-19 is the most recent respiratory pandemic to necessitate better knowledge about city planning and design. The complex connections between cities and pandemics, however challenge traditional approaches to reviewing literature. In this article we adopted a rapid review methodology. We review the historical literature on respiratory pandemics and their documented connections to urban planning and design (both broadly defined as being concerned with cities as complex systems). Our systematic search across multidisciplinary databases returned a total of 1323 sources, with 92 articles included in the final review. Findings showed that the literature represents the multi-scalar nature of cities and pandemics – pandemics are global phenomena spread through an interconnected world, but require regional, city, local and individual responses. We characterise the literature under ten themes: scale (global to local); built environment; governance; modelling; non-pharmaceutical interventions; socioeconomic factors; system preparedness; system responses; underserved and vulnerable populations; and future-proofing urban planning and design. We conclude that the historical literature captures how city planning and design intersects with a public health response to respiratory pandemics. Our thematic framework provides parameters for future research and policy responses to the varied connections between cities and respiratory pandemics. • Comprehensive mapping of the literature linking urban planning, design and respiratory pandemics has yet to occur. • We review the historical literature since 1900. • We present and detail 10 themes developed across 92 articles. • The presented framework provides parameters for future research and policy responses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Policing, planning and sex: Governing bodies, spatially.
- Author
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Crofts, Penny, Hubbard, Phil, and Prior, Jason
- Subjects
- *
CRIMINAL law , *BROTHELS , *HUMAN sexuality , *GOVERNMENT regulation , *LOCAL government , *LAW enforcement - Abstract
Literatures on the regulation of conduct have tended to focus on the role of policing and the enforcement of criminal law. This paper instead emphasizes the importance of planning in shaping conduct, using the example of how planning shapes sexual conduct to demonstrate that planning can, in different times and places, exercise police-type powers. We illustrate this by analysing the regulation of brothels in Sydney and Parramatta, NSW, Australia, providing a case study of spaces of sexuality that historically were constructed and regulated as criminal, but have since become lawful. This paper examines the ways in which these transitions in law have been differently expressed and accomplished through local planning enforcement. In making such arguments, the paper emphasizes not only the potential for planners to act like police, but also the capacity of planning to supplant policing as a key technique of governmentality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Legal Geography: An Australian Perspective.
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BARTEL, ROBYN, GRAHAM, NICOLE, JACKSON, SUE, PRIOR, JASON HUGH, ROBINSON, DANIEL FRANCIS, SHERVAL, MEG, and WILLIAMS, STEWART
- Subjects
- *
GEOGRAPHY , *ECONOMICS , *GEOGRAPHERS , *MATERIALISM , *GEOPOLITICS - Abstract
Law is a powerful influence on people and place. Law both creates and is created by the relationship between people and place, although it rarely acknowledges this. Law frequently operates as if space does not matter. Law and legal processes, therefore, deserve greater attention from geographers. Legal geography is an emerging field of inquiry that facilitates much-needed attention to the interrelationships among the environment, people and social institutions, including formal laws but also informal rules, norms and lore. Legal geographers seek to make the invisible visible: to bring the law into the frame of geography, and space and place into focus for the law. Both critical and applied in approach, legal geography offers descriptive, analytical and normative insight into economics, justice, property, power, geopolitics, governance and scale. As such it can enrich most areas of geographic inquiry as well as contribute to current policy debates about the regulation of space and place. Legal geography is a way for enlarged appreciations of relationality, materiality, multiscalarity and agency to be used to interrogate and reform the law. This introduction to a special 'themed paper' section of Geographical Research provides a window on legal geography scholarship, including its history, contribution and ambition. The papers in the collection explore issues grounded in the legal geographies paradigm, variously analysing matters empirically detailed while engaging in broader, theoretical debates and using both Australian and international case studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Noxious neighbours? Interrogating the impacts of sex premises in residential areas.
- Author
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Hubbard, Phil, Boydell, Spike, Crofts, Penny, Prior, Jason, and Searle, Glen
- Subjects
- *
NEIGHBORS , *SEX industry , *RESIDENTIAL areas , *HUMAN sexuality , *BROTHELS , *STRIPTEASE clubs , *PORNOGRAPHIC films , *ETHICS - Abstract
Premises associated with commercial sex--including brothels, striptease clubs, sex cinemas, and sex shops--have increasingly been accepted as legitimate land uses, albeit ones whose location needs to be controlled because of assumed 'negative externalities'. However, the planning and licensing regulations excluding such premises from areas of residential land use are often predicated on assumptions of nuisance that have not been empirically substantiated. Accordingly, this paper reports on a survey of those living close to sex industry premises in New South Wales, Australia. The results suggest that although some residents have strong moral objections to sex premises, in general residents note few negative impacts on local amenity or quality of life, with distance from a premise being a poor predictor of residents' experiences of nuisance. These findings are considered in relation to the literatures on sexuality and space given regulation which ultimately appears to reproduce heteronormative moralities rather than respond to genuine environmental nuisances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Hepatocellular Carcinoma With Intracavitary Cardiac Involvement: A Case Report and Review of the Literature
- Author
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Sung, Anthony D., Cheng, Susan, Moslehi, Javid, Scully, Eileen P., Prior, Jason M., and Loscalzo, Joseph
- Subjects
- *
LIVER cancer , *HEART ventricles , *TOMOGRAPHY , *RIGHT heart ventricle - Abstract
A 71-year-old man with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) presented with intracavitary cardiac involvement detected incidentally on surveillance computed tomography. Tumor with associated thrombus was found to extend from the liver through the inferior vena cava into the right atrium. This intracardiac mass prolapsed intermittently into the right ventricle, causing functional tricuspid stenosis. The mass was resected but recurred after 4 months, eventually causing refractory right-sided heart failure. This case illustrates how intracavitary cardiac involvement of HCC can develop insidiously and confer significant hemodynamic compromise. A review of the published research, including postmortem studies, demonstrates that the frequency of intracardiac mass lesions in HCC is not insignificant. In conclusion, early detection and diagnosis may have increasing importance in the advent of new therapies for treating advanced HCC. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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