Frank N. von Hippel

Arms Control and Energy Analyst Class of 1993
location icon Location
Princeton, New Jersey
age iconAge
56 at time of award

About Frank's Work

Frank von Hippel is a theoretical physicist whose work has contributed significantly to technology assessment and policy formation in international security and energy.

Von Hippel’s research interests include proliferation-resistant, nuclear fuel cycles, cooperative approaches to nuclear disarmament, nuclear test bans, warhead dismantlement, and improvements in automobile efficiency.  In the mid-1970s, he organized the American Physical Society’s Reactor Safety Study, which discredited the U.S. Government’s claims about the safety of civilian nuclear reactors.  He is co-author of Advice and Dissent: Scientists in the Political Arena (1974) and Citizen Scientist (1990), editor of Life in Times of Turbulent Transitions: The Memoirs of Arthur R. von Hippel (1988), and co-editor of Reversing the Arms Race: How to Achieve and Verify Deep Reductions in Nuclear Weapons (1990).  His articles have appeared in such publications as Science & Global Security and Scientific American.

Biography

Von Hippel is the Professor of Public and International Affairs at the Woodrow Wilson School of Princeton University, where he is also co-director of the Program on Science and Global Security.  He served previously as assistant director for national security in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (1993-94).

Von Hippel received a B.S. (1959) from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a D.Phil. (1962) from the University of Oxford.

Last updated January 1, 2005

Published on July 1, 1993

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