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Living in the evacuation zone of a major fire gave me a taste of the coming climate crisis—and an appreciation for the human ...
Weather conspiracies distract from what should be done to blunt the next catastrophe: funding weather and climate research, ...
July 2025 blends Westerns, horror, and satire to delve into life in the COVID era and beyond. Key to the plot is the ...
Founded by scientists and engineers of the Manhattan Project in the wake of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists has been alerting humanity to the ...
Vesal Razavimaleki is a graduate student at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign where he is an affiliate of the program in Arms Control and Domestic and International Security (ACDIS).
Matt Caplan is a nuclear physicist and professor at Illinois State University, and a 2021 Next-Generation Fellow of the ...
An aspiring nuclear terrorist in Iran could be actively building an improvised nuclear weapon after an opportunity to steal ...
The Bulletin’s disruptive technology vertical tracks a wide variety of scientific and technological advances that could—either in the present or the future—pose an existential threat to humanity.
The US administration must address nuclear arms control in different ways: sustain existing limits with Russia and build predictability with China.
The Trump administration released America’s AI Action Plan, which proposes gutting regulations, expanding AI use, and building data centers.
Rather than forcing China into trilateral nuclear arms control talks, the largest nuclear powers should discuss reductions to military spending for nuclear weapons and other destabilizing systems.
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