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Publicatie Laka-bibliotheek:
The Search for Radiation Standards and Science - Diplomacy in the Interwar Period

AuteurAske Hennelund Nielsen, Maria Rentetzi
6-01-4-30-57.pdf
Datumnovember 2024
Classificatie 6.01.4.30/57 (STRALING - NORMEN)
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Uit de publicatie:

The Search for Radiation Standards and Science
Diplomacy in the Interwar Period
Aske Hennelund Nielsen and Maria Rentetzi
Physics in perspective
8 November 2024.

This paper argues that international cooperation on devising radiation 
standards and measuring devices has been an issue not only of national 
concern but of binational and international conflict in the interwar period.
 Moreover, the production of radiation safety standards and radiation units 
gradually became a diplomatic process that underlined national rivalries and
depended on political and diplomatic interests. As a result of this 
diplomatic process, early major scientific actors on radiation research lost
prominence. The need to decide on radiation standards that could address 
medical, military and industrial concerns was therefore acute long before the
1950s and the establishment of international organizations such as the United
Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR) and
the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), that took the lead in 
regulating the uses of ionizing radiation in the postwar period.