Nuclear Security and Risk
Since its founding as the Center for International Security and Arms Control, CISAC has worked through scholarly research and Track II diplomacy to influence policies that will help reduce the dangers posed by nuclear weapons.
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Publications
Records 12-22 of 135Sort by Title | Year
Can We Unlearn the Bomb?
Michael Freedman
The Atlantic (2011)

Commitment Trap, The: Why The United States Should Not Use Nuclear Threats to Deter Biological and Chemical Weapons Attacks
Scott D. Sagan
International Security vol. 24, 4 (2000)
- Communicating Nuclear Risk: Informing the Public about the Risks and Realities of Nuclear Terrorism
Tonya L. Putnam
(2002)
- Congress Could Deal Death Blow to American Scientific Exceptionalism
Robert Forrest
The Huffington Post (2012)
- Congressional testimony for governance, oversight and management of Nuclear Security Enterprise
Siegfried S. Hecker
(2012)
- Cox Committee Report, The: An Assessment
Michael M. May, Alastair Iain Johnston, W.K.H. Panofsky, Marco Di Capua, Lewis Franklin
CISAC (1999)
Despite Economic Downturn, Nuclear Energy Commerce is still Worrisome
Karthika Sasikumar
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (2009)
Detecting Nuclear Material in International Container Shipping: Criteria for Secure Systems
Michael M. May, Dean Wilkening, Tonya L. Putnam
Journal of Physical Security vol. 1, 1 (2004)

- Don't block U.S.-Russian nuclear cooperation
Pavel Podvig
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Online (2008)
Energy Transitions: A Curious History
Richard Rhodes
CISAC (2007)
Enforcing International Standards: Protecting Nuclear Materials From Terrorists Post-9/11
George Bunn
Arms Control Today vol. 37, 1 (2007)




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