Newswise — KNOXVILLE—The International Journal of Nuclear Security—a peer-reviewed journal that publishes scholarly articles and research related to all aspects of nuclear security—is now available online and free to the public.

The new journal is produced in collaboration by three units at University of Tennessee, Knoxville: the Department of Nuclear Engineering in the College of Engineering, the Department of English in the College of Arts and Sciences, and the Institute for National Security in the Howard H. Baker Jr. Center for Public Policy. The new publication was formally launched at the 2015 International Nuclear Security Education Network in Vienna, Austria, last week.

Howard Hall, UT-ORNL Governor's Chair for Global Nuclear Security and director of the Institute for Nuclear Security, is leading the effort.

"The journal strengthens UT's ties to even greater international networks of nuclear security experts," Hall said. "We're proud to be a strategic partner in such an innovative campus-wide project in nuclear security."

The journal seeks to promote a much-needed international and interdisciplinary exchange of scholarly work among educators, researchers, policy makers, practitioners, and experts from government and industry, as well as the military and law enforcement communities. All of these entities work together to maintain a world secure from nuclear aggression and illicit use of nuclear materials, while supporting peaceful uses of nuclear technologies.

The Governor's Chair program was created to strengthen the ties between UT and ORNL, as two of the main thrusts of the program are energy science and nuclear security. Along with Hall, Steve Zinkle, Governor's Chair for Nuclear Materials; Brian Wirth, Governor's Chair for Computational Nuclear Engineering; and William Weber, Governor's Chair for Radiation Effects on Materials, all bring expertise from the nuclear engineering department on those topics, as well as an understanding of the kind of collaboration the journal hopes to forge.

In addition to articles, the journal publishes book reviews; news about conferences, seminars and other events relevant to nuclear security; descriptions of new educational programs or courses in nuclear security; and the work of first-place winners in the international student writing competition.

Russel Hirst—who directs the program in technical communication for UT's English department—serves as the journal's managing editor.

"I'm delighted to be part of this new publication, designed to connect and energize conversations among educators and professionals working in the multidimensional fields of nuclear security as well as among laypeople interested in understanding issues of vital importance to their countries and societies," said Hirst. "Although I'm not an expert in the science, technology or policy connected to nuclear security, I share the motivations of people working in those fields. Like them, I want a world safe from nuclear terror and enriched by peaceful uses of nuclear science and technology.”

The International Journal of Nuclear Security is published in English and is hosted on the Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange.

To read the journal, visit http://www.trace.tennessee.edu/ijns.

C O N T A C T :

Sumner Brown (865-974-6952, [email protected])

David Goddard (865-974-0683, [email protected])

Tyra Haag (865-974-5460, [email protected])

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