The Effects of Nuclear War

APPENDIX E

SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER READING

Physical Effects of Nuclear Warfare

Ayers, R. N., “ Environmental Effects of Nuclear Wea pens” (3 VOLS, ), Hudson Inst., H 1-518, December 1965.

Batten, E. S., “The Effects of Nuclear War on the Weather and Climate,” RAND Corp., RM-4989, November 1966,

Bennett, B., “Fatality Uncertainties in Limited Nuclear War,” RAND, R-2218-AF, November 1977.

Defense Civil Preparedness Agency, U.S. Department of Defense, “DCP A Attack Environment Manual,” Publication CPG 2-1A, 9 Vols, June 1973 (vol. 4 revised June 1977).

Drell, S. and von Hippel, “Limited Nuclear War,” Scientific American, November 1976.

Glasstone and Dolen, eds; Effects of Nuclear Weapons, 3rd ed., U.S. Department of Defense and Department of Energy, Washington, DC., 1977,

Green, J., “Response to DCPA Questions on Fallout,” Defense Civil Preparedness Agency, Washington, D. C., November 1973.

Mark, J, C., “Global Consequences of Nuclear Weaponry,” Annual Review of Nuclear Science, 1976, 26:51-87.

National Academy of Sciences, “Effects of Multiple Nuclear Explosions Worldwide,” Washington, D. C., 1975.

U.S. Arms Control & Disarmament Agency, “The Effects of Nuclear War,” Washington, D. C., April 1979.

U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on Foreign Relations, Subcommittee on Arms Control, International Organizations, and Security Agreements, Hearings: Effects of Limited Nuclear Warfare, 94th Cong., 1st sess. (1975). 61 p.

U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on Foreign Relations, Subcommittee on Arms Control, International Organizations, and Security Agreements, Comm. Print: “Analyses of Effects of Limited Nuclear Warfare,” 94th Cong., 1st sess (1975). Contains, among other things, the Sept. 11, 1974, Briefing on Counterforce Attacks by Secretary of Defense, James R Schlesinger, and the report of the Office of Technology Assessment Ad Hoc Panel on NucIear Effects.

Economic Impact of Nuclear War (General) and Economic Recovery From Nuclear War

Goen, R., et al., “Analysis of National Entity Survival,” Stanford Research Institute, November 1967,

Goen, R., et al , “Critical Factors Affecting National Survival,” Stanford Research institute, 1965,

Goen, R., et al., “Potential Vulnerabilities Affecting National Survival,” Stanford Research Institute, 1970,

Hanunian, N , “Dimensions of Survival: Postattack Survival Disparities and National Viability,” RAND Corp., KM-51 40, November 1966.

Hirshleiter, J., , “Economic Recovery,” RAND, P-11 60, August 1965,

Katz, A., “Economic and Social Consequences of Nuclear Attacks on the United States,” U.S. Senate, Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, 96th Cong., 1st sess. (March 1979),

Laurius, R., and F. Dresch, “National Entity Survival: Measure and Countermeasure,” Stanford Research Institute, 1971.

Lee, H., et al., “ Industrial Production and Damage Repair Following Nuclear Attack,” Stanford Research Institute, March 1968.

Pettis, Dzirbals, Krahenbuhl, “Economic Recovery Following Nuclear Disaster: A Selected, Annotated Bibliography,” RAND Corp., R-2143, December 1977.

Sobin, B., “Post Attack Recovery,” Research AnaIys is Corp., RAC-P-51, June 1970.

Winter, S.G., Jr., “Economic Recovery From the Effects of Thermonuclear War,” RAND, p-2416, August 1961.

Winter, S.G., Jr, “Economic Viability After Nuclear War: The Limits of Feasible Production, RAND, RM-3436, September 1963

Economic Impacts of Nuclear War (Specific), Including Agricultural Impacts

Brown, S., “Agricultural Vulnerability to Nuclear War,” Stanford Research Institute, February 1973.

Jones, T .K., “Industrial Survival and Recovery After Nuclear Attack: A Report to the Joint Committee on Defence Production, U.S. Congress,”The Boeing Co., Seattle, Walsh., 1976

Killion, et al., "Effects of Fallout Radiation on Crop. Production,” Comparative Animal Research Laboratory, July 1975

Leavitt, J., “Analysis and Identification of NatIonaIIy EssentiaI Industries, Vol. I: Theoretical Approach,” Institute for Defense Analyses, P-972, March 1974

Stanford Research Institute, “U.S. Agriculture: P’otentiaI VuInerabiIities,” January 1969.

Stanford Research Institute, “Agricultural Vulnerability in the National Entity Survival Context,” July 1970

Stephens, M M , “VuInerabiIIty of Total Petroleum Sytems,” Office of Oil and Gas, Department of the Interior, May 1973.

Administrative, Social, Psychological, etc., Factors Relating to Postattack Issues

Administrative, Social, Psychological, etc., Factors Relating to Postattack Issues

Brown, W. M., “Emergency Mobilization for Postattack Reorganization,” Hudson Institute, H1-874/2, May 1968.

Brown, W. M , “On Reorganizing After Nuclear Attack,” RAND, P-3764, January 1968.

Dresch, F., "Information Needs for Post-Attack Recovery Management,” Stanford Research Institute, April 1968

EIlis, Dresche, “ Industrial Factors in Total VulnerabiIity,” Stanford Research Institute, April 1968.

Hirshleiter, J , “Disaster and Recovery: A Historical Survey,” RAND, RM-3079, April 1963.

Ikle, F. C., The Social Impact of Bomb Destruction, Norman, Okla., University of Oklahoma Press, 1958.

Janis, l., Air War and Emotional Stress, New York: McGraw Hill, 1951.

Vestermark, S., (cd.), “Vulnerabilities of Social Structure,” Human Sciences Research, Inc., December 1966.

Winter, S. G., Jr., “The Federal Role in Post Attack Economic Organization,” P-3737, RAND, November 1967.

Civil Defense

Aspin, Les, “The Mineshaft Gap Revisited,” Congressional Record, Jan. 15, 1979, pp. E26-35.

Egorov, P. T., et al., Civil Defense, Springfield, Va.: National Technical Information Service, 1973. A translation of Crazhdanskaya Oborna, 2nd cd., Moscow, 1970.

Goure, L., War Survival in Soviet Strategy, Washington, D. C.: Advanced International Studies Institute, 1976.

Goure, L., Soviet Civil Defense in the Seventies, Washington, D.C.: Advanced International Studies Institute, 1975.

Kaplan, F. M., “The Soviet Civil Defense Myth Parts I & II,” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, March and April 1978.

Kincaid, W., “Repeating History: the Civil Defense Debate Renewed,” International Security, winter 1978.

Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Civil Defense (Grazhdanskaya Oborna) (translation), December 1973.

Sullivan, R., et al., “Candidate U.S. Civil Defense Programs,” System Planning Corp., March 1978.

Sullivan, R., et al., “Civil Defense Needs of High-Risk Areas of the United States,” System Planning Corporation, SPC 409,1979

U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, “An Analysis of Civil Defense in Nuclear War,” Washington, D. C., December 1978.

U.S. C.I.A., “Soviet Civil Defense,” Director of Central Intelligence, N178-10003, July 1978.

U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, (Hearings on Civil Defense), Jan. 8, 1979.