Fr. 156.00

Corporate Governance and the Nuclear Industry

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks (not available at short notice)

Description

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List of contents

1. The Pickwick Papers: A new age dawns 2. Somebody’s Luggage: The story of the study 3. The Old Curiosity Shop: The emergence of a nuclear Legacy 4. A Tale of Two Cities: An international comparison of governance over the nuclear problem 5. Sketches by Boz: A governance framework 6. Great Expectations: The beginning and subsequent maturity of a new industry 7. Little Dorrit: Controlling the Legacy 8. The Haunted Man and the Ghost’s Bargain: Accountability 9. Bleak House: Regulation and the Legacy 10. A Christmas Carol: A remembrance of things past

About the author

Barry Pemberton has worked as a professional finance manager and accountant for most of his career, developing academic interests along the way. Working at the University of Oxford, he completed his doctorate in governance at Roehampton University and is now pursuing a career in writing and research services.

Summary

Corporate Governance and the Nuclear Industry explores the UK nuclear Legacy - governance issues associated with the decommissioning of a range of early-generation civil nuclear facilities. This book traces how we got here and the risks that have been taken, whilst presenting new research and thinking that is required to manage our nuclear Legacy.
The book addresses a new analytical approach using notions of governance to review key historic events. This approach analyses these events using concepts of stakeholder control, accountability and regulation. Using these concepts and undertaking a more detailed analysis of the Legacy’s current governance arrangements; the conventional public sector-based solutions that attempt to harness private sector expertise, this book will contrast these with government responses to determine the degree of control over the Legacy and any possible control issues.
Corporate Governance and the Nuclear Industry concludes that we need to recognise the legacy’s problems as exceptional rather than prosaic, and suggests that this requires exceptional governance solutions rather than the current form that is clearly failing.

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