Common use of Chapter Five Clause in Contracts

Chapter Five. From the Second World War to Continuous At Sea Deterrence 87 The genesis of the British atomic energy project 87 The public atomic narrative 94 Early days of the British nuclear enterprise 95 Early Opposition 104 The second generation of the British strategic nuclear deterrent 109 Cuban Missile Crisis 115 Labour Party in government 119 Defence Policy and the withdrawal from East of Suez 121 The 1970s – Continuous At-Sea Deterrence 122 Chapter Six: The Decision to replace Polaris 127 Initial discussions on Trident 127 The NATO Theatre Nuclear Forces issue 133 Public engagement 135 The Polaris Successor Decision 137 Trident: Post decision debate 142 Anti-Nuclear Protests 146 Civil Defence 149 Fiction – the lie through which we tell the truth 151 The Churches 153 Trident D5 Decision 156 Trident, the Media and the Public 157 Historical evidence – conclusions 163 Chapter Seven: Ethical Considerations and Wicked Issues 166 The Just War tradition – the traditional approach 166 The Ethics of Command of a Trident Submarine – a Personal Note 167 Supreme Emergency, Dirty Hands, and Nuclear Deterrence 171 The Just War Tradition 172 The Moral Subject and Invincible Ignorance 174 Just War in Practice? 178 Rights-Based Ethics of the Use of Force 180 Just war and the rights-based framework 181 The Right of Self Defence 185 The Strong Organic View 187 Alternatives to Rights-Based Ethics 189 Implications 191 Why don’t statesmen act morally? 193 Wicked issues 195 Human Embryology and Fertilisation 196 ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ and public perceptions of scientific development 199 ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ and experts 202 Genetically Modified (GM) Crops 203 Understanding Risk 204 The Nuclear Debate 207 Chapter Eight – Conclusions: British Nuclear Deterrence in the 21st Century 209 Introduction – is this important? 209 Nuclear deterrence theory in the 21st Century 211 A minimum deterrent 214 A credible and assured deterrent 217 An independent nuclear deterrent 219 A reluctant nuclear weapons state 220 Factors in the development of British Government policy 222 Strategic Imperatives 222 Industrial Capacity 224 Cost – a technical factor? 224 Prestige 226 Civil defence 228 Moral views 229 Experts and the public debate 232 Expertise in public 237 Public engagement 240 The press and other media 243 Conclusions 244 Bibliography 248

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Sources: End User License Agreement, End User License Agreement