Joe Cirincione
The
president of the Ploughshares Fund wants to know: If a treaty rises in
the UN and the US media doesn't notice, does it make a difference?
'A fast reactor at any cost': The perverse pursuit of breeder reactors in India
M.V. Ramana
India’s fast breeder reactor program is uneconomical and risky, and lacks a sound rationale.
How to reduce South Asia's nuclear dangers
Jayita Sarkar, Rabia Akhtar, Mario E. Carranza
Our excellent debate
on reducing South Asia’s nuclear dangers will close its final round
next week. Find out what measures are available to India, Pakistan, and
outside nations that might reduce the risk of a South Asian nuclear
exchange.
The latest subscription journal is now online at Taylor & Francis with a mix of free-access and subscription-only articles. |
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Dan Drollette Jr.
Steven
Chu was the first scientist ever to serve as a member of the
president’s cabinet. In this interview, Chu talks about some of the
reasoning behind the decisions he made in office; what policymakers need
to do to encourage investment in renewables, and how to make progress
in the current, anti-regulatory political environment. Free access from the November/December subscription journal.
Gabrielle Tarini
Keeping
pace with biotechnology: This month’s Biological Weapons Convention
Review Conference is a chance to reinvigorate the aging treaty.
What We’re Reading is a new blog at the Bulletin featuring short posts about articles you’ll want to see. This week we look at "super emitters," the 5% of methane leaks responsible for more than 50% of the US methane problem.
Would you spend $1 trillion tax dollars on nuclear weapons?
Try the new app at the Future of Life Institute.
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