Nuclear energy in postwar Japan and anti-nuclear movements in the 1950s.

Masakatsu Yamazaki
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Abstract

The atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945 revealed the most destructive power to-date of man-made weapons. Their impact was so great that Japanese scientists thought that a bigger disaster could be prevented only if war was abolished. Thus they welcomed the international control of atomic energy. It was, however, only after the occupation that the Japanese general public began to learn about the horror of these atomic disasters due to the censorship imposed by the occupational forces. The hydrogen bomb test by the US in the Bikini atoll on March 1, 1954 renewed fears of nuclear weapons. The crew of a Japanese fishing vessel, the "Daigo Fukuryu Maru" (Lucky Dragon No. 5) suffered from exposure to radiation from the test. Even after the incident the US did not stop nuclear tests which continued to radioactively contaminate fish and rains in Japan. As a result, the petition movement for the ban of nuclear trials suddenly spread all over the country. By the summer of 1955 the number of the signatures grew to more than one third of Japan's population at the time. Under the strong influence of anti-nuclear Japanese public opinion the Science Council of Japan announced the so-called three principles of atomic energy: "openness," "democracy," and "independence" to ensure atomic energy was used for peaceful uses only. These principles were included in the Atomic Energy Basic Law established in December 1955. With this law, military uses of nuclear energy were strictly forbidden.

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战后日本的核能和1950年代的反核运动。
1945年8月在广岛和长崎投下的原子弹展示了迄今为止最具破坏力的人造武器。它们的影响如此之大,以至于日本科学家认为,只有废除战争,才能防止更大的灾难。因此,他们欢迎国际原子能管制。然而,直到占领之后,由于占领军的审查制度,日本公众才开始了解这些原子灾难的恐怖。1954年3月1日,美国在比基尼环礁进行了氢弹试验,再次引发了人们对核武器的担忧。日本“福龙五号”(Daigo Fukuryu Maru)渔船的船员受到了核试验的辐射。即使在事故发生后,美国也没有停止核试验,这继续对日本的鱼类和雨水造成放射性污染。因此,要求禁止核试验的请愿运动突然在全国蔓延开来。到1955年夏天,签名的人数增加到当时日本人口的三分之一以上。在日本反核舆论的强烈影响下,日本科学协议会宣布了所谓的原子能三原则:“开放”、“民主”和“独立”,以确保原子能只用于和平目的。这些原则已载入1955年12月制定的《原子能基本法》。根据这项法律,核能的军事用途被严格禁止。
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来源期刊
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期刊介绍: Scientiarum is the international journal of the History of Science Society of Japan. It was established in 1962, titled as Japanese Studies in the History of Science, and renamed to the present title in 1980. It is published three times a year, containing articles, notes, documents, and reviews, which are written in English/German/or French.
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