Organizational Cultures and the Management of Nuclear Technology

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Ahmed Mansoor
ALARA Principle
American Civil Military Relations
atomic
atomic energy policy
bureaucratic decision making
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China's Nuclear Strategy
China’s Nuclear Strategy
Choi Sungyeol
civil
Civil Military Nexus
civil military nuclear management
Civil Nuclear
Constantine P. Danopoulos
Countering Insurgents
dual use technology
Energy Policy
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eq_society-politics
French Reprocessing Plant
Gopalaswamy Bharath
Hwang Il Soon
IAEA Convention
India's Nuclear
India’s Nuclear
international
Jose San
Kampani Gaurav
Lucia A. Seybert
material
military
MOX Plant
NFU Policy
nuclear governance
Nuclear Organizations
Nuclear Posture Review
Nuclear Power
Nuclear Power Program
Nuclear Safety
Pakistan's Nuclear
Pakistan's Nuclear Program
Pakistan’s Nuclear
Pakistan’s Nuclear Program
Planned Power Reactors
Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto
programs
proliferation risk
relations
safety
Sasikumar Karthika
Small Modular Reactors
sociology
South Korea's Nuclear
South Korea’s Nuclear
ssile
strategic deterrence theory
Vice Versa
War Bride

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138529410
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Sep 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Nuclear technology has been an organizing premise of the international system since 1945. Eight countries have officially acknowledged the possession of nuclear weapons. Many countries have harnessed the atom for electricity generation and other civilian uses. Roughly 440 commercial nuclear reactors operate in thirty countries providing 14 percent of the world's electricity. Volatile oil prices and concerns about climate change have led newly emerging economies in Asia to express keen interest in using nuclear energy to meet growing energy demands. Since the basic technological apparatus for both civilian and military nuclear programs is the same, there are concerns about the potential spread of dual-use technology.

The future stability of the international order depends on the responsible management of their nuclear assets by nuclear powers. The relationship between civilian authorities and the military takes on special significance in states with nuclear weapons or near-weapon capability. The constitutional balance of powers, the delegation of authority during wartime and peace, influences from public opinion and bureaucratic structures on the formulation of doctrine, crisis management, and communications with the international media and the general public are influenced by civil-military relations and organizational culture.

This volume will be of broad interest to scholars of civil-military relations, political science, and political sociology.