Senior Risk Institute Fellow Publishes "High-Activity Nuclear Waste Management Policy: Becoming a Responsible Ancestor"
/Dr. Daniel Daniel Metlay, a Risk Institute Senior Fellow, publishes book titled “High-Activity Nuclear Waste Management Policy: Becoming a Responsible Ancestor".
Abstract: High-Activity Nuclear Waste Management Policy: Becoming a Responsible Ancestor describes the technical, social, and political challenges of developing a deep-mined, geologic repository for high-activity nuclear waste. It emphasizes how the technical estimates of repository performance affect non-technical considerations, such as trust and risk perceptions, and how those considerations in turn affect the technical determinations. (Full abstract available at Routledge)
Bio: Dr. Daniel Metlay is an independent researcher in the field of nuclear waste management. He graduated in 1967 from Caltech with a double major in molecular biology and medieval history. He later entered the Ph.D. program for political science at the University of California, Berkeley. While there, he was invited to join a Task Force established by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission to develop the first set of goals and objectives for nuclear waste management. Dr. Metlay taught organization theory and public policy at Indiana University and MIT for more than a dozen years. He was later appointed to direct a Secretary of Energy Task Force charged with recommending ways to merit and sustain public trust and confidence in DOE’s nuclear waste management program. He then joined the staff of U.S. Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board, preparing reports to Congress and serving as the micro-agency’s international liaison. Throughout his career, Dr. Metlay has published over 100 articles, technical reports, presentations, and government documents. He retired in 2018 after three decades of public service.

