Dr Peter Pella has just retired after being a Physics professor for over 35 years. He spent the last 28 years at Gettysburg College where he was the W K T Sahm Professor of Physics. His research included the study of the spin response of the nuclear force and fundamental properties of the neutron. He has participated in research at the Indiana University Cyclotron Facility, the Bates Linear Accelerator Facility and the Thomas Jefferson Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator facility in medium-energy nuclear physics. He is also involved in issues related to nuclear weapons. His expertise focuses on nuclear nonproliferation, the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, The International Atomic Energy Agency, and nuclear issues involving North Korea and Iran. As a William Foster Fellow from 1994 to 1995, he worked at the United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, from which he received a Meritorious Honor Award for his service in helping to achieve the indefinite extension of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. He also worked at the Bureau of Nonproliferation, US Department of State, from 2000 to 2001 on issues relating to Iraq, North Korea, and The International Atomic Energy Agency. He contributed two chapters (Nuclear Nonproliferation and The International Atomic Energy Agency) to the Oxford International Encyclopedia of Peace published by Oxford University Press in October 2009. He also authored a textbook, Nuclear Weapons, Policy, and Strategy, The Uses of Atomic Energy in an Increasingly Complex World, for a nuclear weapons policy course he had taught for over 30 years. He holds a bachelor's degree in nuclear engineering from the United States Military Academy at West Point; a master's degree in experimental nuclear physics from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; and a doctorate in experimental nuclear physics from Kent State University.
"The Midlife Crisis of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty should
be required reading on campus, on Capitol Hill, at Foggy Bottom, at
the Vienna International Center and in Geneva for anyone interested
in or involved in nuclear energy, nuclear nonproliferation and
nuclear disarmament. Pete Pella navigates confidently (and at times
wryly) through the complexities of past and current nuclear
dilemmas without losing sight of what's at stake. This articulate,
beautifully written and slim volume weaves science and policy
seamlessly to the benefit of both communities." - Sharon Squassoni,
Senior Fellow and Director, Proliferation Program, Center for
Strategic & International Studies, Washington, D.C.
"Dr. Pella has done a remarkable job of covering the entire
spectrum of nuclear nonproliferation in one compact book. He traces
the history of the bomb, the physics of nuclear energy, the
components of the nonproliferation regime, and the modern
challenges to that regime. Professor Pella's technical background
and years of teaching allow him to make accessible the most complex
aspects of nuclear energy. Anyone seeking a clear and concise
explanation of nuclear weaponry, the proliferation challenges these
weapons present, and the nonproliferation response to these
challenges should read this book." - Ambassador Norman A. Wulf,
Special Representative of the President on Nonproliferation
(1999-2002)
"Dr. Pella has produced a timely and accessible discussion of how
the science and technology that lies behind nuclear programs can be
used for peaceful or non-peaceful purposes, and the proliferation
challenges this duality presents to the international community. He
has combined a superb primer for non-technical readers with a
valuable discussion of the global nonproliferation architecture
that has been established to address these challenges. Professor
Pella makes a compelling case that preventing the further spread of
nuclear weapons is a tough, challenging, and urgent task, and
requires more than just 'political will.' Anyone interested in or
critical of the nuclear landscape and the steps needed to address
it should read this book." - Susan Burk, Ambassador and Special
Representative of the President for Nuclear Nonproliferation
(2009-2012)
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