
Photo Credit: Reuters
Health and the Environment
Health and environmental issues will heavily impact global security in the coming decades and pose important challenges for international cooperation. The relationship between the environment and international security is attracting increased interest among scholars and policymakers alike. Chris Chyba, a former CISAC co-director, has done seminal work on bioterror and biosecurity and how deterrence theory might be applicable to defense against bioweapons. Kate Marvel has developed new methods to understand the localized effects of climate change, including the potential implications on security issues.
Other research in this burgeoning area includes work done by Dean Wilkening and Lawrence Wein on biosecurity and bioterrorism, Herbert Abrams on the dangers of radiation, and several researchers on the connections between food production, environmental resources, and international security.
Publications
The 5 most recent are displayed. More publications »
- Exposure to Low-‐Dose Radiation: We Need Social Discussion for Risk Judgment
Toshihiro Higuchi
Asahi Shimbun (2012) - Global Implications of China's Challenges – Part I
Thomas Fingar
YaleGlobal Online (2012) - Technology Can Nudge Climate Change Politics
Charles Perrow
Bloomberg News (2011) - Rape Reporting During War: Why the Numbers Don't Mean What You Think They Do
Dara K. Cohen
Foreign Affairs (2011) - Standards & Regulations for the Geologic Disposal of Spent Nuclear Fuel and High-Level Waste
Rodney C. Ewing
(2011)
Events & Presentations
- Mechanisms of Antibiotic Resistance and the Impact of Drug Resistance on the Development and Use of Antibiotics
January 23, 2012 Science Seminar
Paul J. Jackson - Combating Counterfeit Medications: A Pharmacist's Perspective
October 3, 2011 Science Seminar
Elaine Law - Two Bioterrorism Issues: Food Contamination and Anthrax Decontamination
November 9, 2004 Science, Technology and Security Seminar
Lawrence M. Wein