Research at FSI Stanford
Nuclear Weapons Safety and Security
Controlling nuclear weapons and the means to make them is essential to keeping the most deadly weapons from reaching terrorists. CISAC researchers work to find ways of improving the safety and security of existing weapons and to secure the materials and technology for making new weapons.
Publications
Sort by Year | Title
- Illicit Trafficking of Weapons-Usable Nuclear Material: Facts and Uncertainties
Lyudmila Zaitseva, Friedrich Steinhausler
Physics and Society vol. 33, 1 (2004)
Problem of Redundancy Problem: Why More Nuclear Security Forces May Produce Less Nuclear Security, The
Scott D. Sagan
Risk Analysis vol. 24, 4 (2004)
Nuclear Smuggling Chains: Suppliers, Intermediaries, and End-Users
Lyudmila Zaitseva, Kevin Hand
American Behavioral Scientist vol. 46, 6 (2003)

- Reducing the Threat of Nuclear Theft and Sabotage
George Bunn, Matthew Bunn
IAEA International Symposium (2002)
- Strengthening Nuclear Security Against Post-September 11 Threats of Theft and Sabotage
George Bunn, Matt Bunn
Nuclear Materials Management (2002)
Nuclear Theft and Sabotage: Priorities or Reducing New Threats
George Bunn, Matt Bunn
IAEA Bulletin vol. 43, 4 (2001)
Raising International Standards for Protecting Nuclear Materials from Theft and Sabotage
George Bunn
The Nonproliferation Review (2000)
