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Scientists' Working Group on Chemical and Biological Weapons Joins Center for Arms Control and Nonproliferation

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by Alan Pearson [contact information]

The Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation

is pleased to announce a new addition:

The Arms Control Center (ACC) Scientists Working Group on Biological and Chemical Weapons

formerly the Federation of American Scientists Working Group

on Biological and Chemical Weapons

January 7, 2004

The Working Group, founded in 1989, has joined the Center’s newly expanded program on biological and chemical weapons control. At present, the defining goals of the Working Group and the program are reinforcing the norm against biological weapons and broadening the norm to encompass all misuse of biology. Major interests include preventing the development of biochemical disabling agents as weapons, promoting international measures to monitor biological weapons-capable activities, global cooperative measures for combating infectious diseases, ethical education of bioscientists, and monitoring US biodefense and anti-bioterrorism activities. The Working Group develops working papers and reports on technical and policy issues and holds seminars and briefings for US and international officials.

Working Group members have extensive experience with biological weapons issues and significant technical expertise that they contribute on a voluntary basis. The Group is chaired by Dr. Barbara Hatch Rosenberg, a molecular biologist at the State University of New York at Purchase.

The Working Group can be reached at cbw@armscontrolcenter.org or at the Center’s Capitol Hill headquarters:

ACC Scientists Working Group

Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation

322 4th Street, NE

Washington, DC 20002

1-202-543-4100

Alan Pearson 202-546-0795 ext. 2107 apearson@armscontrolcenter.org

Dr. Alan Pearson is the Director of the Biological and Chemical Weapons Control Program at the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation where his work focuses on biological weapons, chemical weapons, and WMD proliferation. Pearson's work has been published and cited in numerous publications, including Nonproliferation Review, Nature, and Science. He is editor of the book Incapacitating Biochemical Weapons: Promise or Peril? (November 2007).