Publication Laka-library:
Manual For Survival. A Chernobyl Guide to the Future

AuthorKate Brown
Date2019
Classification 2.34.8.10/119 (CHERNOBYL ACCIDENT - CONSEQUENCES SURROUNDINGS - GENERAL)
Front

From the publication:

Manual for Survival: A Chernobyl Guide to the Future
Kate Brown
2019

A chilling exposé of the international effort to minimize the health and 
environmental consequences of nuclear radiation in the wake of Chernobyl.

Dear Comrades! Since the accident at the Chernobyl power plant, there has been 
a detailed analysis of the radioactivity of the food and territory of your 
population point. The results show that living and working in your village will 
cause no harm to adults or children.

So began a pamphlet issued by the Ukrainian Ministry of Health—which, despite 
its optimistic beginnings, went on to warn its readers against consuming local 
milk, berries, or mushrooms, or going into the surrounding forest. This was only 
one of many misleading bureaucratic manuals that, with apparent good intentions, 
seriously underestimated the far-reaching consequences of the Chernobyl nuclear 
catastrophe.

After 1991, international organizations from the Red Cross to Greenpeace sought 
to help the victims, yet found themselves stymied by post-Soviet political 
circumstances they did not understand. International diplomats and scientists 
allied to the nuclear industry evaded or denied the fact of a wide-scale public 
health disaster caused by radiation exposure. Efforts to spin the story about 
Chernobyl were largely successful; the official death toll ranges between 
thirty-one and fifty-four people. In reality, radiation exposure from the 
disaster caused between 35,000 and 150,000 deaths in Ukraine alone.

No major international study tallied the damage, leaving Japanese leaders to 
repeat many of the same mistakes after the Fukushima nuclear disaster in 2011. 
Drawing on a decade of archival research and on-the-ground interviews in 
Ukraine, Russia, and Belarus, Kate Brown unveils the full breadth of the 
devastation and the whitewash that followed. Her findings make clear the 
irreversible impact of man-made radioactivity on every living thing; and 
hauntingly, they force us to confront the untold legacy of decades of weapons-
testing and other nuclear incidents, and the fact that we are emerging into a 
future for which the survival manual has yet to be written.

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