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Nonproliferation drivers from civil nuclear power: South Korea's external constraints and internal beneficiaries

Author(s)
Choi, SungyeolHwang, IS
Issued Date
2011-12
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/16946
Citation
JOURNAL OF POLITICAL AND MILITARY SOCIOLOGY, v.39, pp.85 - 102
Abstract
Civil nuclear power, currently supplying fourteen percent of the world's electricity, triggers concerns because of its inevitable technical connection with nuclear weapons. Moreover, a civil nuclear program lives under the threat of sabotage or the theft of fissile or radioactive materials. Managing these nuclear risks requires exploring how a civil nuclear program affects states 'proliferation risk and organizational culture since nuclear expansion will continue in many developing countries despite the Fukushima accident
Publisher
Journal of Political and Military Sociology
ISSN
0047-2697

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