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The Nonproliferation Review

Volume 16, Issue 1, 2009

THE GLOBAL NUCLEAR ENERGY PARTNERSHIP

THE GLOBAL NUCLEAR ENERGY PARTNERSHIP

Proliferation Concerns and Implications

DOI:
10.1080/10736700802645668
Jeff Lindemyer

pages 79-93

Available online: 02 Mar 2009

Abstract

Since the dawn of the atomic age, the United States has sought to encourage the use of nuclear energy while minimizing the proliferation risks associated with it. The latest U.S. initiative that sets out to accomplish this is the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP), which, in its current form, potentially includes the spread of sensitive nuclear technologies around the globe. This article examines the concerns surrounding the proliferation of these technologies and surveys their history both domestically and internationally. In identifying these concerns, the author argues that GNEP needs to be considered in the context of the Atoms for Peace program; that it erodes the successful thirty-year U.S. position against reprocessing; and that it allows for the spread of technologies that are not proliferation-resistant.

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Details

  • Available online: 02 Mar 2009

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Taylor & Francis Group