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HIST 296: Human Trafficking and Nuclear Testing in the Pacific: Nuclear Testing

This guide focuses on primary and secondary resources related to human trafficking and nuclear testing in the Pacific

Introduction

      

Between 1946 and 1958, the United States conducted 67 atomic bomb tests in the Marshall Islands, rendering some islands uninhabitable and causing lasting health impacts on the Marshallese people. Meanwhile, between 1952 and 1991, the United Kingdom conducted 47 tests in Australia and Christmas Island, while France conducted 193 nuclear tests between 1966 and 1996 in French Polynesia, including 41 atmospheric detonations. These testing programs gave rise to the Nuclear Free and Independent Pacific (NFIP) movement in 1975.

Selected films

Government documents

UHM Pacific digital image collections

Each of the below collections includes imagery related to nuclear testing and its after effects in the Marshall islands. The above image comes from a series of 15 photos that are included in the Jack Tobin Marshall Islands Anthropology Collection. These 15 images document a 1957 trip to Argonne National Laboratories by a group of Marshallese from the island of Rongelap, following their exposure to radiation via the "Castle Bravo" test of March 1, 1954. Click here to view all 15 images.