Does an airline pilot really need to surrender his tweezers at airport security when he s about to board an aircraft equipped with an axe on the back of the cockpit door?
Can a mobile phone really cause a major explosion at a gas station?
And is there really a good reason why you should be be prevented from swimming in a lake more than a foot deep?
These rules exist, and they exist in the name of our own protection. But in this engrossing dissection of global health, safety and security regulations, authors Tracey Brown and Michael Hanlon dig a little deeper to discover the real reasons behind many of the instructions we obey without questioning their creators motives. Their conclusions range from the startling to the staggering, and in presenting them the authors seek to empower readers to question the people and organisations who come up with them in the first place.
Previously published as In the Interests of Safety.
About the Author
Michael Hanlon is the Senior Science Commentator on the Daily Mail, and a writer known for his ability to make science accessible. He is the author of The Worlds of Galileo: The Inside Story of NASA s Mission to Jupiter (Constable, 2001).
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