2014
DOI: 10.3138/chr.1945
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The Creation of Radicalism: Anti-Nuclear Activism in Nova Scotia, c. 1972–1979

Abstract: An attempt to build the world's largest nuclear power plant on a tiny island off the south shore of Nova Scotia in the early 1970s sparked an anti-nuclear movement that was able, by the end of the decade, to force the provincial government to abandon plans for a united regional electric utility. The provincial movement shared in the creation of national, continental, and even global campaigns against nuclear technology but was fractious within itself. Bringing together peace activists, feminists, countercultur… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The acrimonious political debate that followed culminated in the referendum in 1980 and the subsequent parliamentary decision to phase-out nuclear power by the year 2010, a mere eight years after the first plant had started operation, and before some of the already built reactors had even been put into operation [34,35]. Similar developments in roughly the same time periods, with an initial, massive atomic hype transformed relatively quickly into widespread resistance and critique, can be seen in the nuclear power history of many other industrialised countries, albeit with somewhat differing framings and successes [36][37][38][39][40].…”
Section: Environmental Opposition To Nuclear Powermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The acrimonious political debate that followed culminated in the referendum in 1980 and the subsequent parliamentary decision to phase-out nuclear power by the year 2010, a mere eight years after the first plant had started operation, and before some of the already built reactors had even been put into operation [34,35]. Similar developments in roughly the same time periods, with an initial, massive atomic hype transformed relatively quickly into widespread resistance and critique, can be seen in the nuclear power history of many other industrialised countries, albeit with somewhat differing framings and successes [36][37][38][39][40].…”
Section: Environmental Opposition To Nuclear Powermentioning
confidence: 99%