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Welcome


The Oceans and The Nuclear Age (ONA)

The Law of the Sea Institute (LOSI) located at the University of California at Berkeley welcomes
you to this companion to the Institute's Oceans in the Nuclear Age Project. For a description
of the project, please click here.

This site is a work-in-progress that draws together various official documents of international law
and other materials to give its users a better understanding of how nuclear weapons, materials and
waste interact with issues surrounding the welfare, use and future of our oceans.

This site requires the Use of Adobe Acrobat. To get this program free-of-charge, please click here.

February 10th & 11th 2006, at Boalt Hall School of Law, UC Berkeley

The Law of the Sea Institute will present The Oceans and The Nuclear Age: Legacies and Risks:
A Conference to Examine the Legacies and Future Implications of the Nuclear Age for the Oceans.
For complete information, please click here.


Thank You.

This site was made possible through the support of the Institute of International Studies at the University
of California at Berkeley under the Crossing Borders Foundation funded by the Ford Foundation.

Below you will find the various topics, click to explore each in-depth:

Nuclear-Free Zones

Nuclear Testing and its Legacy

Dumping and Accidental Loss of Nuclear Material

Sea Transport of Nuclear Material and Radioactive Waste

Terrorism and Ocean-Related Nuclear Activities

Nuclear Weapon Free Zones and Passage of Nuclear-powered Warships and
Ships Carrying Nuclear Weapons

Coming Soon.
Additional Background Documents and Readling List

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

| Home | Table of Contents | Testing | Dumping & Loss | Transport |

| Security | Nuclear-Free Zones | Coastal Nuclear Plants | Background Materials |

| The ONA Project | ONA Project Conference | Boalt Hall's Site |

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

much to accomplish, little to lose. For the oceans are vast, deep, and bountful pools of, well water. Water, of course is made up of two p of hydrogen for every one part of oxygen.