Richard C. J. Somerville
“Why
is Uncle Pete so stubborn and so resistant to overwhelming scientific
evidence?” That's a very good question, and here is the answer. Editor’s note: This article is adapted from a presentation at the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists’ annual dinner, held on November 14 in Chicago.
Patricia Lewis, David Livingstone
Satellites form the exoskeleton of the world’s critical infrastructure—and they’re seriously vulnerable to cyber attacks.
The latest subscription journal is now online at Taylor & Francis with a mix of free-access and subscription-only articles.
The Nuclear Roundup is now at the Bulletin
Sign up to
receive Jodi Lieberman's Nuclear Roundup. Discover why so many readers
find this daily summary of nuclear-related news simply indispensable.
|
|
Lawrence J. Korb, Alan Robock, John Mecklin, Frank von Hippel, Robert Socolow, Sharon Squassoni
How
can people with true expertise in major global threats help the Trump
administration to take actions that protect humanity in the long-term?
Science and Security Board member Sharon Squassoni
joins in by focusing on the long game, wondering whether the Trump
administration could be influenced to reduce rather than increase
nuclear risks; climate scientist Robert Socolow
believes that climate policy and science itself may be at risk over the
next four years, and outlines some actions that will provide the needed
counterweight to an administration that so far seems bent on trashing
climate science.
Hua Han, Gregory Kulacki, Rajesh Rajagopalan
Rajesh Rajagopalan posts his second installment in our new debate
on China's role in the nuclear order by observing that the disconnect
between China's stated policy and its actual actions are so divergent
that one must ask whether the two are really the same.
Dan Drollette Jr.
This week we look at the latest issue of The Economist,
which features some of the best analyses of what has happened in the US
election — and what it could mean for national security, global
warming, the nuclear arms race, and other issues of concern to Bulletin readers.
|
|
Emma Hansen, University of Toronto, and Zian (Zane) Liu, UC Berkeley
Next #GivingTuesday, November 29th, the Bulletin
is dedicating all contributions we receive to the very important effort
of recruiting and publishing today's emerging leaders. Help us publish authors like Emma Hansen and Zian (Zane) Liu by making a donation to this effort, and know you are supporting the Bulletin's Next Generation of authors and researchers.
Use the hashtags #GivingTuesdayBAS and #BulletinNextGen on your social networks to increase the Bulletin’s
reach and fundraising potential. You can share our social media
messages and post your own to Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn,
Google+, and others.
Image Credit--The White House
Board of Sponsors member Richard L. Garwin awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom
Congratulations to Richard Garwin on his Presidential Medal of Freedom, awarded November 22 by President Barack Obama.
About the Bulletin
For more than 70 years the Bulletin has
engaged science leaders, policy makers, and the interested public on
topics of nuclear weapons and disarmament, the changing energy
landscape, climate change, and emerging technologies.
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment