Research at FSI Stanford
Chemical and Biological Weapons Proliferation and Terrorism
CISAC scholars work with colleagues at Stanford and other institutes to address the threat of chemical and biological weapons (CBW) proliferation and the potential use of these weapons by terrorists.
Publications
Sort by Year | Title
- Nuclear Warfare
Dean Wilkening
Encyclopedia of Violence, Peace, and Conflict, Academic Press, 2nd edition (2008) - Modeling the Incubation Period of Inhalational Anthrax
Dean Wilkening
Medical Decision Making vol. 28, 4 (2008)
Sverdlovsk Revisited: Modeling Human Inhalation Anthrax
Dean Wilkening
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences vol. 103, 20 (2006)
Degradation of Biological Weapons Agents in the Environment: Implications for Terrorism Response
Amy L. Stuart, Dean Wilkening
Environmental Science and Technology vol. 39, 8 (2005)
- Biotechnology and Bioterrorism: An Unprecedented World
Christopher F. Chyba, Alexander L. Greninger
Survival vol. 46, 2 (2004)
Effectiveness of Nuclear Weapons against Buried Biological Agents
Michael M. May, Zachary Haldeman
Science and Global Security vol. 12 (2004)
- Russia's Poison Gases
Christopher F. Chyba
New York Times (2002)
Toward Biological Security
Christopher F. Chyba
Foreign Affairs vol. 81, 3 (2002)

Correspondence: Responding to Chemical and Biological Threats
Scott D. Sagan
International Security vol. 25, 4 (2001)
- Biological Terrorism and Public Health
Christopher F. Chyba
Survival vol. 43 (2001) - Sheltering Effects of Buildings from Biological Weapons
Lester L. Yuan
Science & Global Security vol. 8 (2000)
Commitment Trap: Why The United States Should Not Use Nuclear Threats to Deter Biological and Chemical Weapons Attacks, The
Scott D. Sagan
International Security vol. 24, 4 (2000)
