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Europe's infrastructure both united and divided peoples and places
via economic systems, crises, and wars. Some used transport,
communication, and energy infrastructure to supply food, power,
industrial products, credit, and unprecedented wealth; others
mobilized infrastructure capacities for waging war on scales
hitherto unknown. Europe's natural world was fundamentally
transformed; its landscapes, waterscapes, and airscapes turned into
infrastructure themselves. Europe's Infrastructure Transition
reframes the conflicted story of modern European history by taking
material networks as its point of departure. It traces the
priorities set and the choices made in constructing transnational
infrastructure connections - within and beyond the continent.
Moreover, this study introduces an alternative set of
historically-key individuals, organizations, and companies in the
making of modern Europe and analyzes roads both taken and ignored.
Transnational perspectives on the relationship between nuclear
energy and society. With the aim of overcoming the disciplinary and
national fragmentation that characterizes much research on nuclear
energy, Engaging the Atom brings together specialists from a
variety of fields to analyze comparative case studies across Europe
and the United States. It explores evolving relationships between
society and the nuclear sector from the origins of civilian nuclear
power until the present, asking why nuclear energy has been more
contentious in some countries than in others and why some countries
have never gone nuclear, or have decided to phase out nuclear,
while their neighbors have committed to the so-called nuclear
renaissance. Contributors examine the challenges facing the nuclear
sector in the context of aging reactor fleets, pressing climate
urgency, and increasing competition from renewable energy sources.
Written by leading academics in their respective disciplines, the
nine chapters of Engaging the Atom place the evolution of nuclear
energy within a broader set of national and international
configurations, including its role within policies and markets.
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