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Atomic Reporters

Supporting journalists covering nuclear news

Tag: study programme

A Neglected Story – The Legacy of Splitting the Atom

Join us for the kick-off meeting of the first study programme of the Konrad-Adenauer-Foundation Multilateral Dialogue in cooperation with Atomic Reporters…… Read More A Neglected Story – The Legacy of Splitting the Atom

21st June 202123rd June 2021 atomicreporters

TIMELINE – TO THE THIRD NUCLEAR AGE | A resource website on nuclear history

21 April 22: Online event: “The Future of European Security Architecture”

https://youtu.be/tKRX8sf5sMg

Webinar, 8 February 2022: The NPT and Recent Developments

https://youtu.be/aTzZni4lgsk

Online event video: Disruptive Technologies and Strategic Stability

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1J6jX-m3Kc4

AR’s Tariq Rauf speaks with TRT World about the AUKUS defense agreement

https://youtu.be/kJC52cHkJ04

Kick-off meeting first AR-KAS Study Programme 2021/22

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MsszMLHTRok

About this series

In 2017 Atomic Reporters kicked off a citizen journalism training project for members of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization’s Youth Group, to encourage them to use a range of media and amplify their voices in support of the treaty. Since then members of the project – with support from Atomic Reporters and the CTBTO – have had material published in media including Teen Vogue, extensively on social media, in two editions of a magazine they produced, and in other outlets. They have also made a range of video products broadcast by, among others, UN TV. Atomic Reporters will continue encouraging citizen nuclear journalism by publishing in these pages the expression of younger commentators about nuclear weapons issues.

Ambassador Gustavo Zlauvinen speaking at the Atomic Reporters webinar on 2021 NPT Review conference

https://youtu.be/Y4NBlCrqLpw

Downloads

Interactive version of Rotterdam recommendations and guidelines

Safety Guidelines for Journalists: Radiation Incidents (PDF)

Rotterdam recommendations on reporting a radiation emergency (PDF)

AR & Youth

This article is part of an effort by Atomic Reporters to help young women and men bring citizen journalism skills to the nuclear file, and add well sourced information to a broader conversation with their peers. As nuclear arms control unravels, the 24 year freeze on nuclear testing is being challenged, the issue is as distant as another galaxy for many young people who will inherit it. Atomic Reporters was founded to help journalists open the nuclear file and make a subject shrouded in secrecy and unaccountable more accessible.

About this series

Atomic Reporters supported this two part series by Sylvia Mishra and Hamzah Rifaat about the impact of social media in last year’s standoff between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan by John Dale Grover. The article has been published in The National Interest, a US national security publication.

Mishra and Rifaat were selected by an independent jury for a reporting fellowship as part of  the ‘This is not a drill’ project that introduced international journalists to a range of issues from civil defense preparedness to heightened nuclear weapons dangers that have emerged in the revolution in digital technologies.

The project was organized by Atomic Reporters with the Stanley Center for Peace and Security and support from the Carnegie Corporation of New York with a workshop on the first anniversary of a false missile alert in Hawaii at the height of tensions between North Korea and the US. The project took its name ‘this is not a drill’ from the warning telegraphed to the citizens of the state of Hawaii on January 13, 2018.

About the author

Sylvia Mishra is a Washington D.C. based researcher working on nuclear policy, Asian security and disruptive technologies. She is the Co-Chair of the Women of Colour Advancing Peace and Security (WCAPS) Chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear (CBRN) Working Group and a Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) Project on Nuclear Issues (PONI) mid-cadre fellow. Follow her on Twitter @MishraSylvia

Hiroshima and Nagasaki

Images | Hiroshima Nuclear Memorial Clock | A historical video of life in Hiroshima before the bomb

Who we are

Atomic Reporters is an independent non-profit organization that provides journalists with impartial information about nuclear science and technology to encourage informed reporting.

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