A Civil Action - The Woburn Toxic Trial > Overarching Questions

OVERARCHING SOCIETAL QUESTIONS


Jonathan Harr's awarding winning book "A Civil Action" deals with the uncivil actions occurring in a landmark environmental lawsuit filed by eight families in Woburn, Massachusetts, against two Fortune 500 companies. The lawsuit alleged that W.R. Grace & Co. and Beatrice Foods, Inc. improperly disposed of toxic chemicals that entered the ground-water flow system, were captured by municipal wells G and H, distributed in the city's water mains, and exposure to the toxic chemicals caused severe health effects including a cluster of childhood leukemia. To read a brief summary of the "A Civil Action" book, click here.

Exploring the Overarching Questions

In this website, resources are presented to explore many of the overarching societal societal raised in "A Civil Action" given below. These questions can be explored on three levels. The broadest level is actuated using the links below. Deeper exploration of the questions and how they relate to the Woburn Toxic Trial can be found in Key Issues in the Trial. Photographs, newspaper articles, trial testimony, field data, animations, and maps are organized under Resource Collections. Deepest involvement utilizes the series of Learning Modules that can be used individually within the context of an existing course or used in sequence in an interdisciplinary course that culminates in a mock trial.

What's in your drinking water?

Questions Concerning Cancer

  • Are cancer clusters fact or fiction?
  • What is leukemia?
  • How has treatment of childhood leukemia changed from the 1970s to today?


  • Courtroom #6, McCormick Courthouse

    Questions About Science in the Legal System



    Government of, by and for the people

    Questions About Government, Citizen, and Corporate Responsibility

  • What voice do citizens have in government decision making?
  • Is your government responsible to you or are you responsible to it?
  • Are companies responsible for the actions of corporate predecessors?


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