麻豆相关报道

MIT Professor to Speak on Nuclear Power at 2019 Mahan Lecture


Posted on March 6, 2019
Libi Jacobs


Dr. Kate Brown, professor of history in the science, technology and society department of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, will be the speaker at the 2019 Mahan Lecture on March 14. The lecture is free and open to the public.  data-lightbox='featured'
Dr. Kate Brown, professor of history in the science, technology and society department of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, will be the speaker at the 2019 Mahan Lecture on March 14. The lecture is free and open to the public.

An award-winning historian and author will address questions about nuclear power and its potentially catastrophic effects on humanity and the environment in 鈥淭he Great Chernobyl Acceleration: Why the Nuclear Disaster was not Exceptional鈥 at the Howard F. Mahan Lecture on Thursday, March 14 at 7 p.m. in the 麻豆相关报道 Student Center Ballroom. 

Dr. Kate Brown, professor of history in the science, technology and society department of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, will state the use of nuclear activity and its severe consequences. The lecture is free and open to the public.

Brown will use her most recent book, 鈥淢anual for Survival: A Chernobyl Guide to the Future,鈥 to draw discussion around the aftermath of the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster and the Soviet Union鈥檚 secrecy behind it. She will also highlight a connection between the United States and Soviet Union by their similar responses to health issues caused by radiation.

鈥淚f we are going to increase the number of nuclear power plants on the globe as an answer to climate change, we need to take a more serious wide-open look at the human health and environmental effects of exposures to radioactivity,鈥 said Brown. 

Brown has received numerous awards for her work as an author. She was honored with the Regent鈥檚 Award for Excellence in Research from the University of Maryland and the Berlin Prize by the American Academy in Berlin. Brown held a fellowship with the Guggenheim Foundation and has received support from the Carnegie Foundation, the European Institute and many others for her research.

Brown is a consulting editor for the American Historical Review and co-founder of its special section, History Unclassified. She also serves as senior editor of International Labor and Working Class History.

鈥淎n award-winning author who studies the history of human creation of modern wastelands, Dr. Brown has received international recognition for her research on the Chernobyl disaster,鈥 said Dr. Mara Kozelsky, professor of history at South Alabama. 鈥淗er prize-winning work has put health and environmental consequences of the Chernobyl catastrophe in comparative context with nuclear accidents in the United States. She raises important questions about humanity's impact on the environment and offers a guide for avoiding future crises."

USA鈥檚 Mahan Lecture Series is named after the late Dr. Howard F. Mahan, the founder of the University鈥檚 department of history. After serving a full tour in the U.S. Army Air Corps in World War II, Mahan decided to study history in order to better understand his experiences during the war. As one of the original faculty members of the 麻豆相关报道, he served as chair of history from 1964 to 1983 and retired in 1993.

With the generous support of the 麻豆相关报道 Foundation, the 麻豆相关报道department of history established this annual lecture in honor of Mahan鈥檚 enduring contributions to his students, colleagues, community and state.


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