Laka Foundation

Publication Laka-library:
Stakeholders and Radiological Protection: Lessons from Chernobyl 20 Years After (2006)

AuthorNEA
Date2006
Classification 6.01.4.00/92 (RADIATION - GENERAL)
Front

From the publication:

Stakeholders and Radiological Protection: Lessons from Chernobyl 20 Years After

Twenty years after the major accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, the 
radioactive contamination continues to have an important impact on lives in the 
vicinity, and to a lesser extent in areas such as Western Europe and beyond. The 
purpose of this report is not to address clinical or environmental studies, but to 
look at how people are coping with the difficulties they still face. Commissioned 
by the Committee for Radiation Protection and Public Health of the OECD Nuclear 
Energy Agency (NEA), the report focuses on the role of radiological protection and 
how this discipline has been deployed to help people manage their lives.

Although the topic of this report concerns radioactivity and nuclear power, it can 
also be very useful to policy makers and experts dealing with the aftermath of wide-
scale disasters, regardless of their causes (natural, accidental or malicious).

Whilst we all hope never to see another event causing contamination on the scale 
that followed Chernobyl, it is prudent to be prepared. Hence, this report also 
describes many of the problems that could need to be faced in the longer term by 
technical specialists, should such a contamination event occur, and presents ways 
of dealing with them. This report will provide readers with insights into how to plan 
better for this type of event, in particular beyond the immediate response phase.

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