RF RADIATION: LEGAL AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS
Authors not listed · 1982
1982 experts already recognized RF radiation required legal frameworks - policy discussions we're still having today.
Plain English Summary
This 1982 conference examined the legal and policy implications of RF (radio frequency) radiation exposure, focusing on the regulatory challenges surrounding non-ionizing electromagnetic fields. The conference brought together experts to discuss how emerging bioeffects research should inform legal frameworks and public policy decisions. This represents an early recognition that RF radiation posed regulatory challenges requiring interdisciplinary approaches.
Why This Matters
This 1982 conference marks a pivotal moment when the scientific and legal communities began grappling with RF radiation as a regulatory challenge. The timing is significant - this was just as wireless technologies were beginning to proliferate, yet experts were already recognizing the need for legal frameworks around bioeffects. What's striking is how prescient this discussion was. Four decades later, we're still wrestling with many of the same fundamental questions about how to translate emerging science into effective policy. The conference keywords - bioeffects, non-ionizing radiation, legal implications - reveal that even in 1982, there was acknowledgment that RF radiation wasn't just a technical issue but a societal one requiring legal and regulatory responses. Today, as we carry devices emitting similar RF frequencies in our pockets and live surrounded by wireless infrastructure, the policy frameworks discussed at this conference continue to shape how (or whether) we're protected from potential health effects.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{rf_radiation_legal_and_policy_implications_g64,
author = {Unknown},
title = {RF RADIATION: LEGAL AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS},
year = {1982},
}