James E. Doyle
With
the nuclear-weapon states and their allies headed away from the
increased security a world without nuclear weapons would bring, it is
time to act to create a multilateral plan for verifiable nuclear
disarmament by the year 2045, 100 years after the first use of nuclear
weapons.
Rachel S. Salzman
Given
the fact that changes in the European energy market can have
significant geopolitical effects, it might seem like EU
emissions-cutting policies could cause serious changes in the EU–Russia
relationship. From the November/December subscription journal.
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Darya Dolzikova
If a nuclear security agreement dies, but it wasn’t really about the nuclear security, does it matter who killed it?
Hua Han, Gregory Kulacki, Rajesh Rajagopalan
Greg Kulacki closes the second round of our new debate
on China's role in the nuclear order by observing that Beijing's
position on the UN resolution to ban nuclear weapons could be a
bellwether for how China will behave in a world that's no longer ordered
around the United States.
Dan Drollette Jr.
This week we look at a study from the latest issue of Nature,
which finds that as soil warms due to climate change, vast amounts of
carbon and methane will be released into the atmosphere.
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NEUTRINOS in a New Light
Ellen Sandor is Fermilab's 2016 artist-in-residence and a friend of the Bulletin. She and (art)n, the collaborative artists group she founded,
spent months speaking with Fermilab scientists and learning about the
ways they study subatomic particles called neutrinos. She created a
series of new works that visualize the invisible science of particle
physics. The exhibit, “NEUTRINOS in a New Light,” will be on display at the Fermilab Art Gallery from Dec. 2, 2016, through March 17, 2017.
About the Bulletin
For more than 70 years the Bulletin has
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