Rogue States and Suitcase Bombs: Coping with the New Nuclear Threat

Harvard Kennedy School expert in nuclear security Matthew Bunn discusses the nuclear threats of the 21st century: nuclear theft and terrorism, proliferation, and the nuclear energy fuel cycle. How serious are the new nuclear threats?  What methods for handling them are effective?

Recorded March, 2011 

Matthew Bunn is Associate Professor of Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government and author of Coping with the New Nuclear Threat.

The nuclear threat did not disappear when the Cold War ended. Instead it fractured and morphed into new 21st century forms which have kept the nuclear clock set close to midnight. From disposing of old nuclear weapons to building new uranium enrichment facilities, from the protocols of “mutually assured destruction to the image of the “suitcase bomb,” Matthew Bunn examines the various sources of nuclear threat today and explores means of containing and controlling them. Which nation states pose the greatest nuclear danger? What role do non-state actors play in the current landscape of nuclear threat? How are domestic and international governing bodies addressing these new nuclear threats? What role can concerned citizens play in preventing nuclear catastrophe today?


World On The Edge

Internationally renowned environmentalist Lester Brown has been assessing the health of the earth’s ecosystems for more than two decades.  Over that time he has seen increasing signs of breakdown until we are now facing issues of near overwhelming complexity and unprecedented urgency. Can we change direction before we go over the edge? In his new book World On The Edge,  Brown attempts to illuminate a path toward preventing environmental and economic collapse.

Recorded February 9th, 2011


WORLD ON THE EDGE: Preventing Environmental and Economic Collapse

Lester Brown, president of the Earth Policy Institute, a D.C. research organization, discusses his new book, World on the Edge: How to Prevent Environmental and Economic Collapse.

For two decades, Lester Brown has been assessing the state of planet’s well being. How does he analyze the current status of the Earth’s ecosystems? Dramatic events have already altered the status quo for populations across the globe. Given the loss of wheat, due to the 2010 record summer heat wave in Russia, will future generations of farmers be able to feed 8 billion people? What solutions does Brown propose to restore the Earth’s health?

Author of 20 major books alerting the public to possible environmental problems, Lester Brown is widely perceived as the nation’s leading environmental writer. E.O. Wilson, in his supporting note on the book cover writes: “If the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize has been extended to a third recipient, the logical candidate would have been Lester Brown.” Brown has received numerous prizes, including a MacArthur Fellowship, the U.N. Environment Prize, Japan’s Blue Planet Prize and twenty-five honorary degrees.