1981 



U.S. Federal Energ.v Administration. Office of International Energy Affairs. 

 Report to Congress on: Foreign Ownership Control and Influence on Domestic 

 Energy Sources and Supply. Washington. For sale b}" the Supt. of Docs., U.S. 

 Govt. Print. OflF., 1974. 80 p. 



". . . This report is an initial effort to assess the extent and character of 

 foreign participation in our domestic energy industries. It provides a basis 

 for evaluating the current status of that participation and for identifying 

 areas warranting more intensive investigations." 

 Yager, Joseph A. and Eleanor B. Steinberg. Energy and U.S. Foreign Policy. (A 

 report of the Ford Foundation's Energy Policy Project.) Cambridge, Massa- 

 chusetts, Ballinger, 1974. 462 p. 



Study which deals specifically with problems of international oil trade and 

 the judicious channeling of nuclear energy development. 



C. NucLE.\R Energy: Research and Cooperation 



Bloom field, Lincoln P. "Nuclear Spread and World Order." Foreign Affairs, 

 V. 53, no. 4, July 1975: 743-755. 



An essay which assesses the need for international attention to controlling 

 the spread of nuclear weapons technology. 

 "Changing Role for OECD's Nuclear Energy Agency." OECD Observer, no. 6G, 

 1973:19-26. 



Atomic energj- — [OECD countries]/Radiation safety — [OECD countries]/ 

 International cooperation in science/International agencies/Organization for 

 Economic Cooperation and Development. Nuclear Energy Agency. 

 DiNolas, Massimo. "Nuclear Industry Prepares for Boom." Atlantic Community 

 Quarterly, v. 12, summer 1974: 205-212. 



Argues that European nuclear industries must rationalize and cooperate in 

 order to prevent U.S. firms from dominating the atomic power plant market. 

 Donnelly, Warren H. "Some Notes on Congress and Nuclear Safeguards." Pre- 

 pared for the Workshop on Plutonium, Safeguards, and the Breeder; Session on 

 Safeguards and the Public of the Atomic Industrial Forum, October 23, 1974. 

 25 p. 



Presents background on U.S. international cooperation agreements in 

 nuclear power and safeguards measures and congressional reaction to these 

 agreements. 

 Doub, William O. "A Compelling Priority: International Standards for Nuclear 

 Safety." Public Utilities F ortnighthj, v. 94, Sept. 26, 1974: 66-68. 



"Disproportionate attention is being given development of new inter- 

 national safeguards against theft of nuclear materials, when in fact such 

 safeguards already exist. What is needed, however, is a great effort toward 

 international co-operation to write safety standards." 

 Doub, William O. and Joseph M. Dukert. "Making Nuclear Energy Safe and 

 Secure." Foreign Affairs, v. 53, no. 4, July 1975: 756-772. 



The author elaborates upon the following: "... the International 

 Atomic Energy Agency is not without its problems. The Nonproliferation 

 Treaty is far from a perfect treaty. Yet both have been workable and valu- 

 able in the past. In order for both to remain so in the future, there is no . 

 choice . . . but to strengthen systematically the stature, capabilities, and 

 responsibilities of the IAEA. The best hope of linking substantial progress 

 at the 1980 NPT Review Conference with arms-hmitations agreements among 

 the nuclear-weapons countries lies in the rapid achievements of this 

 objective." 

 Droutman, Lawrence Julian. Nuclear Integration: the Failure of Euratom. Sub- 

 mitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of 

 Philosophy in the Faculty of PoUtical Science, Columbia University, 1973. 

 369 p. 



Traces the history of Euratom and its failure to integrate European nations 

 through scientific cooperation. 

 Drozdiak, William M. "US-EC Uranium Relations." European Community, 

 no. 187, June 1975: 8-11. 



Article discusses the problems and confusion over the supply of nuclear 

 fuels needed for European atomic programs. A recent change in U.S. export 

 policy is causing the Europeans to seek other sources of nuclear fuels. 



