1st Edition

Nuclear France New Questions, New Sources, New Findings

Edited By Benoît Pelopidas Copyright 2024
186 Pages
by Routledge

186 Pages
by Routledge

186 Pages
by Routledge

This book offers the first non-official history of French nuclear policies which goes beyond the divide between nuclear weapons and nuclear energy policies. It addresses the sizing of France’s nuclear forces, technological assistance to countries with nuclear weapons programs, uranium prospection, nuclear testing, its health effects and protests against it, as well as plans to prevent and manage... Read more

Preface

Benoît Pelopidas

 

1. Unfit for purpose: reassessing the development and deployment of French nuclear weapons (1956–1974)

Benoît Pelopidas and Sébastien Philippe

 

2. Normalisation of nuclear accidents after the Cold War

Valerie Arnhold

 

3. Nuclear twins: French-South African strategic cooperation (1964–79)

Anna Konieczna

 

4. From the dependable to the demanding partner: the renegotiation of French nuclear cooperation with India, 1974–80

Jayita Sarkar

 

5. Nuclear reach: uranium prospection and the global ambitions of the French nuclear programme, 1945–65

Matthew Adamson

 

6. The Argentella Scandal: Why French Officials Did Not Make Corsica a Nuclear Test Site in 1960

Austin R. Cooper

 

7. French nuclear policy towards Iran: from the Shah to the Islamic Republic

Clément Therme

 

8. Radiation Exposures and Compensation of Victims of French Atmospheric Nuclear Tests in Polynesia

Sébastien Philippe, Sonya Schoenberger and Nabil Ahmed

Biography

Benoît Pelopidas is Associate Professor and the founding director of the Nuclear Knowledges program at the Center for International Studies, Sciences Po, Paris, France. Nuclear Knowledges is the first scholarly research program in France on the nuclear phenomenon which refuses funding from stakeholders of the nuclear weapons entreprise or from antinuclear activists in order to problematize conflicts of interest and their effect on knowledge production. The program mobilizes interdisciplinary methods to become able to assess accepted claims about nuclear realities. Benoît is an affiliate to CISAC at Stanford University and has been a visiting fellow at Princeton University’s Program on Science and Global Security. He is the PI of the VULPAN project funded by the French National Research Agency and the NUCLEAR project funded by the European Research Council.

AWARDS:

- Sebastian Phillipe, author of Chapter 8. Radiation Exposures and Compensation of Victims of French Atmospheric Nuclear Tests in Polynesia (along with Sonya Schoenberger and Nabil Ahmed), awarded the MacArthur Fellowship. 

- Honourable Mention at the Doreen and Jim McElvany Nonproliferation Award for Chapter 6. The Argentella Scandal: Why French Officials Did Not Make Corsica a Nuclear Test Site in 1960 by Austin R. Cooper

"During the Cold War, France's nuclear behavior persistently baffled and enervated other Western national security policymakers. Yet in the English-language scholarship on Cold War nuclear history, France has received less attention than any other traditional great power. This excellent collection of essays by up-and-coming scholars goes a long way toward piercing the fog of myth and misperception that continues to obscure the complex truth about France's nuclear actions and their consequences." 

Jacques E. C. Hymans, University of Southern California, USA