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Nuclear disarmament --- Nuclear disarmament --- Nuclear warfare --- Nuclear warfare
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Nuclear engineering --- Nuclear disarmament. --- Simulation methods.
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Nuclear disarmament --- Russia (Federation). --- United States --- Russia (Federation) --- Foreign relations --- Russia (federation) --- Political science
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Nuclear disarmament --- Russia (Federation). --- United States --- Russia (Federation) --- Foreign relations --- Russia (federation) --- Political science
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Contents: Opening Session (A Zichichi, T D Lee, D R Scott & R G Will); AIDS and Infectious Diseases - Medication or Vaccination for Developing Countries (G Gray, P Van De Perre, G Biberfeld, A A Lindberg, M Klein & G De Thé); Missile Proliferation and Defense (A Piontovsky, G H Canavan, R K Huber & V J Sundaram); Tchernobyl - Mathematics and Democracy (V Kukhar & Z R Rudzikas); Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy (D Heim, H Budka & A Smith); Floods and Extreme Weather Events - Coastal Zone Problems (D Scavia, D Dorogan, D Danut, D Boesch & P M Douglas); Science and Technology for Developin
Science --- Epidemiology --- Nuclear disarmament --- Nature --- Human beings --- Environmental degradation --- Diseases --- Public health --- Social aspects --- Research --- International cooperation --- Effect of human beings on --- Effect of environment on
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Nuclear disarmament -- Russia (Federation). --- Nuclear power plants -- Decommissioning -- Russia (Federation). --- Nuclear weapons industry -- Russia (Federation). --- Research, Industrial -- Russia (Federation). --- Small business -- Russia (Federation). --- Technical assistance, American -- Russia (Federation). --- Technology and state -- Russia (Federation). --- Nuclear weapons industry --- Nuclear disarmament --- Nuclear power plants --- Technical assistance, American --- Small business --- Technology and state --- Research, Industrial --- Business & Economics --- Industries --- Decommissioning --- Contract research --- Industrial research --- American technical assistance --- Atomic power plants --- Nuclear power stations --- Power plants, Nuclear --- Atomic bomb and disarmament --- Atomic weapons and disarmament --- Disarmament, Nuclear --- Nuclear weapons disarmament --- Research --- Engineering experiment stations --- Inventions --- Technological innovations --- Nuclear facilities --- Power-plants --- Antinuclear movement --- Nuclear energy --- Disarmament --- Nuclear weapons --- Weapons industry
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Globalization --- Justice --- Nuclear weapons --- War on Terrorism, 2001-2009 --- Atomic weapons --- Fusion weapons --- Thermonuclear weapons --- Weapons of mass destruction --- No first use (Nuclear strategy) --- Nuclear arms control --- Nuclear disarmament --- Nuclear warfare --- Injustice --- Conduct of life --- Law --- Common good --- Fairness --- Global cities --- Globalisation --- Internationalization --- International relations --- Anti-globalization movement --- Moral and ethical aspects --- India --- Economic conditions --- Politics and government --- INDE --- POLITIQUE ET GOUVERNEMENT --- CONDITIONS SOCIALES
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The dangers of a United States government plan to abandon its fifty-year policy of keeping civilian and military uses of nuclear technology separate.In December 1998, Energy Secretary Bill Richardson announced that the U.S. planned to begin producing tritium for its nuclear weapons in commercial nuclear power plants. This decision overturned a fifty-year policy of keeping civilian and military nuclear production processes separate. Tritium, a radioactive form of hydrogen, is needed to turn A-bombs into H-bombs, and the commercial nuclear power plants that are to be modified to produce tritium are called ice condensers. This book provides an insider's perspective on how Richardson's decision came about, and why it is dangerous. Kenneth Bergeron shows that the new policy is unwise not only because it undermines the U.S. commitment to curb nuclear weapons proliferation but also because it will exacerbate serious safety problems at these commercial power facilities, which are operated by the Tennessee Valley Authority and are among the most marginal in the United States. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission's review of the TVA's request to modify its plants for the new nuclear weapons mission should attract significant attention and opposition.Tritium on Ice is part expose, part history, part science for the lay reader, and part political science. Bergeron's discussion of how the issues of nuclear weapons proliferation and nuclear reactor safety have become intertwined illuminates larger issues about how the federal government does or does not manage technology in the interests of its citizens and calls into question the integrity of government-funded safety assessments in a deregulated economy.
Nuclear engineering --- Tritium --- Ice condenser containment --- Nuclear nonproliferation. --- Nuclear weapons --- Government policy --- Safety measures. --- Environmental aspects --- Materials. --- Tennessee Valley Authority. --- Atomic weapons --- Fusion weapons --- Thermonuclear weapons --- Export of nuclear materials --- Export of nuclear technology --- International control of nuclear energy --- Nonproliferation, Nuclear --- Nuclear energy --- Nuclear exports --- Nuclear proliferation --- Proliferation, Nuclear --- Atomic power engineering --- International control --- Weapons of mass destruction --- No first use (Nuclear strategy) --- Nuclear arms control --- Nuclear disarmament --- Nuclear warfare --- Nuclear-weapon-free zones --- Nuclear reactors --- Hydrogen --- Engineering --- Nuclear physics --- Containment --- Isotopes --- SOCIAL SCIENCES/Political Science/International Relations & Security --- SOCIAL SCIENCES/Political Science/General
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