科学的实验室小白鼠":1955-1968年冷战时期西德的铀矿开采、被驱逐者、公共卫生和辐射危险的叙述

IF 0.8 2区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY Contemporary European History Pub Date : 2024-06-03 DOI:10.1017/s0960777324000213
Caitlin E. Murdock
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1955-6 年间,三千名讲德语的男子从捷克斯洛伐克的强制劳改营被 "遣返 "到西德,他们在那里开采铀矿,并要求获得辐照造成的健康损害赔偿。这些人将其群体的经历与冷战早期西德的恐惧和发展联系起来,将原子时代的健康风险和公民要求其国家提供保护以避免此类风险的诉求人格化。这些人在 20 世纪 50 年代末和 60 年代推动了公众对辐射健康风险的认识以及对安全的 "和平核技术 "的矛盾心理,这比人们通常认为的要早。他们进一步激发了具体的政策变革,尤其是在职业健康保护方面,这说明战后对核技术的反应来自于长期的历史经验、专业的地方知识和基层行动主义的交汇,以及战后科学和政治的发展。报告还显示了被驱逐者对西德政策中意想不到的领域的长期影响。
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‘Lab Rats for Science’: Uranium Mining, Expellees, Public Health, and Narratives of Radiation Danger in Cold War West Germany, 1955–1968
In 1955–6, three thousand German-speaking men were ‘repatriated’ from Czechoslovak forced labour camps, where they mined uranium, to West Germany, where they demanded benefits for health damage from radiation exposure. These men connected their group's experiences to the fears and developments of early Cold War West Germany, personifying the health risks of the Atomic Age and citizens’ demands that their states offer protection from such risks. These men contributed to public awareness of radiation health risk and to ambivalence about safe ‘peaceful nuclear technology’ in the late 1950s and 1960s, earlier than is usually assumed. They further inspired concrete policy changes, especially in occupational health protection, illustrating that post-war responses to nuclear technology emerged from the intersection of longer historical experience, specialised local knowledge and grassroots activism, as well as from post-war scientific and political developments. It further shows long-lasting expellee influence in unexpected areas of West German policy.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
25.00%
发文量
88
期刊介绍: Contemporary European History covers the history of Eastern and Western Europe, including the United Kingdom, from 1918 to the present. By combining a wide geographical compass with a relatively short time span, the journal achieves both range and depth in its coverage. It is open to all forms of historical inquiry - including cultural, economic, international, political and social approaches - and welcomes comparative analysis. One issue per year explores a broad theme under the guidance of a guest editor. The journal regularly features contributions from scholars outside the Anglophone community and acts as a channel of communication between European historians throughout the continent and beyond it.
期刊最新文献
‘Lab Rats for Science’: Uranium Mining, Expellees, Public Health, and Narratives of Radiation Danger in Cold War West Germany, 1955–1968 Fall of a New Soviet-Jewish Person: The Unmasking of Anti-Antisemite Aleksandr Litinskii, aka American Spy Big Boss Tourism Diplomacy in Cold War Europe: Symbolic Gestures, Cultural Exchange and Human Rights CEH volume 33 issue 2 Cover and Front matter CEH volume 33 issue 2 Cover and Back matter
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