Abstract
On 23 October 1956 in New York, 81 member countries of the United Nations Organization or of its specialized agencies adopted the Statute of the International Atomic Energy Agency, which was to go into formal operation before the end of 1957. A major step towards world-wide control of nuclear energy thus came to be taken more than ten years after the idea of establishing such control had been launched - the first tentative efforts, from 1946 to 1948, having ended in failure. The account follows in an attempt to retrace this 'prehistory' of the IAEA.
Goldschmidt, B
[1]
- Commissariat a l'Energie Atomique, International Relations (France)
Citation Formats
Goldschmidt, B.
The origins of the International Atomic Energy Agency.
IAEA: N. p.,
1977.
Web.
Goldschmidt, B.
The origins of the International Atomic Energy Agency.
IAEA.
Goldschmidt, B.
1977.
"The origins of the International Atomic Energy Agency."
IAEA.
@misc{etde_21046035,
title = {The origins of the International Atomic Energy Agency}
author = {Goldschmidt, B}
abstractNote = {On 23 October 1956 in New York, 81 member countries of the United Nations Organization or of its specialized agencies adopted the Statute of the International Atomic Energy Agency, which was to go into formal operation before the end of 1957. A major step towards world-wide control of nuclear energy thus came to be taken more than ten years after the idea of establishing such control had been launched - the first tentative efforts, from 1946 to 1948, having ended in failure. The account follows in an attempt to retrace this 'prehistory' of the IAEA.}
journal = []
issue = {4}
volume = {19}
place = {IAEA}
year = {1977}
month = {Aug}
}
title = {The origins of the International Atomic Energy Agency}
author = {Goldschmidt, B}
abstractNote = {On 23 October 1956 in New York, 81 member countries of the United Nations Organization or of its specialized agencies adopted the Statute of the International Atomic Energy Agency, which was to go into formal operation before the end of 1957. A major step towards world-wide control of nuclear energy thus came to be taken more than ten years after the idea of establishing such control had been launched - the first tentative efforts, from 1946 to 1948, having ended in failure. The account follows in an attempt to retrace this 'prehistory' of the IAEA.}
journal = []
issue = {4}
volume = {19}
place = {IAEA}
year = {1977}
month = {Aug}
}