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Helen Caldicott | |
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![]() Caldicott in 2007 | |
Born | Helen Mary Broinowski (1938-08-07)7 August 1938 (age 86) |
Occupation(s) | Physician,activist |
Spouse | William Caldicott |
Children | Philip, Penny, William Jr |
Website | http://www.helencaldicott.com/ – Helen Caldicott's official website |
Helen Mary Caldicott (born 7 August 1938) is an Australianphysician, author, andanti-nuclear advocate. She founded several associations dedicated to opposing the use ofnuclear power,depleted uranium munitions,nuclear weapons,nuclear weapons proliferation, and military action in general.
Helen Caldicott was born on 7 August 1938, inMelbourne, Australia, the daughter of factory manager [Theo] Philip Broinowski and Mary Mona Enyd (Coffey) Broinowski, an interior designer. She attended public school, except for four years atFintona Girls' School atBalwyn, a private secondary school. When she was 17, she enrolled at theUniversity of Adelaide medical school and graduated in 1961 with aMBBS degree. In 1962, she married William Caldicott, a paediatricradiologist who has since worked with her in her campaigns. They have three children, Philip, Penny, and William Jr.[1][dubious –discuss]
Caldicott and her husband moved toBoston, Massachusetts, in 1966 and she entered a three-year fellowship in nutrition atHarvard Medical School. Returning to Adelaide in 1969, she accepted a position in the renal unit of Queen Elizabeth Hospital. In the early 1970s, she completed a year's residency and a two-year internship in paediatrics at the Adelaide Childrens Hospital to qualify as a paediatric physician so she could legitimately establish the first Australian clinic forcystic fibrosis at the Adelaide Childrens Hospital. The clinic now has the best survival rates in Australia.[citation needed] In 1977, she joined the staff of the Children's Hospital Medical Center in Boston as an instructor in pediatrics. She taughtpaediatrics at the Harvard Medical School from 1977 to 1980.[1]
Caldicott's interest in nuclear issues was sparked when she read the 1957Nevil Shute bookOn the Beach, a novel about anuclear holocaust set in Australia.[2]
In the 1970s, she gained prominence in Australia, New Zealand and North America, speaking on the health hazards of radiation from the perspective of paediatrics. Her early achievements included convincing Australia to sue France overits atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons in the Pacific in 1971 and 1972, which brought the practice to an end. She also informed Australian trade unions about the medical and military dangers of uranium mining, which led to the three-year banning of the mining and export of uranium.[3]
After visiting the Soviet Union in 1979 with an AFSC delegation and upon learning the impending US deployment of cruise missiles (which would end arms control) and Pershing II missiles that could hit Moscow from Europe in 3 minutes,[4] Caldicott left her medical career to concentrate on calling the world's attention to what she referred to as the "insanity" of thenuclear arms race and the growing reliance onnuclear power. In 1978 she reinvigoratedPhysicians for Social Responsibility. Over time she and others recruited 23,000 physicians to this organisation which, through wide educational efforts, taught the US public about the dire medical implications of both nuclear power and nuclear war. In 1985 this national organisation and many others, she founded around the world were awarded the 1985Nobel Peace Prize. She was herself nominated for the Nobel Prize by Linus Pauling, himself a Nobel winner.[4]
In 1980, she founded the Women's Action for Nuclear Disarmament (WAND) in the United States, which was later renamedWomen's Action for New Directions. It is a group dedicated to reducing or redirecting government spending away from nuclear energy and nuclear weapons towards what the group perceives as unmet social issues.[5]
Caldicott stood as an independent candidate for the Australian House of Representatives at the1990 federal election, contesting theDivision of Richmond, against the Leader of theNational Party,Charles Blunt. She polled 23.3% of the votes; not enough to win, but her preferences went mostly to theLabor candidate,Neville Newell, electing him and unseating Blunt.
In 2002 Caldicott releasedThe New Nuclear Danger, a commentary on the George Bushmilitary-industrial complex. The book was reviewed byIvan Eland ofThe Independent Institute. He wrote, "She makes many cogent criticisms about current and prior administrations’ nuclear policies and the excesses of the government-dominated military-industrial complex associated with nuclear weapons, but her often valid points are undermined by other far-fetched or alarmist arguments, sloppy research, and haphazard footnoting."[6]
In 2008 Caldicott founded the Helen Caldicott Foundation for a Nuclear Free Future which, for over four years, produced a weekly radio commentary, "If You Love This Planet".[7]
In April 2011, Caldicott was involved in a public argument inThe Guardian with British journalistGeorge Monbiot. Monbiot expressed great concern at what he saw as a failure by Caldicott to provide adequate justification for any of her arguments. Regarding Caldicott's bookNuclear Power is Not The Answer, he wrote: "The scarcity of references to scientific papers and the abundance of unsourced claims it contains amaze me."[8][9] Caldicott claimed, "As we have seen, he and other nuclear industry apologists sow confusion about radiation risks and, in my view, in much the same way that the tobacco industry did in previous decades about the risks of smoking."[10] Also in 2011, Caldicott made a written submission regarding theDarlington Nuclear Generating Station new build project inCanada in which she asserts thatplutonium can cause cancer of the testicles after accumulation in these organs.[11]
In 2014,Physicians for Social Responsibility hosted a lecture on "Fukushima's Ongoing Impact" by Caldicott in Seattle, Washington.[12]
Caldicott has been awarded 21 honorary doctoral degrees[citation needed]. In 1982, she received the Humanist of the Year award from theAmerican Humanist Association.[13] In 1992, Caldicott received the 1992 Peace Abbey Courage of Conscience Award at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library in Boston for her leadership in the worldwide disarmament movement. She was inducted to theVictorian Honour Roll of Women[14] in 2001. She was awarded theLannan Foundation Prize for Cultural Freedom in 2003, and in 2006, thePeace Organisation of Australia presented her with the inauguralAustralian Peace Prize "for her longstanding commitment to raising awareness about the medical and environmental hazards of the nuclear age". TheSmithsonian Institution has named Caldicott as one of the most influential women of the 20th century.[15] She is a member of the scientific committee of theFundacion IDEAS, a progressivethink tank in Spain. She serves on the Advisory Council of the Nuclear Age Peace.[16] In 2009, she was designated aWomen's History Month Honoree by theNational Women's History Project.[17]
Title | Year of Publication | Publisher(s) | ISBN | Role |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nuclear Madness: What You Can Do! | 1978 (revised 1994) | W.W. Norton & Company | ISBN 0393310116 | Author |
Missile Envy: The Arms Race and Nuclear War | 1984 | William Morrow & Co | ISBN 978-0688019549 | Author |
If You Love This Planet | 1992 | W. W. Norton & Company | ISBN 978-0393308358 | Author |
A Desperate Passion: An Autobiography | 1996 | W.W. Norton & Company | ISBN 0393316807 | Author |
Metal of Dishonor: How Depleted Uranium Penetrates Steel, Radiates People and Contaminates the Environment | 1997 | International Action Center | ISBN 0965691608 | Author |
The New Nuclear Danger: George W.Bush's Military-industrial Complex | 2002 (revised 2004) | The New Press Scribe Publications (Australia) | ISBN 1565847407,0908011652 | Author |
Nuclear Power is Not the Answer | 2006 | The New Press | ISBN 978-1595580672 | Author |
War in Heaven: The Arms Race in Outer Space | 2007 | The New Press | ISBN 978-1595581143 | Co-author with Craig Eisendrath |
Carbon-Free and Nuclear-Free: A Roadmap for U.S. Energy Policy | 2007 | RDR Books | ISBN 978-1571431738 | Author of Afterword (author isArjun Makhijani) |
If You Love This Planet: A Plan to Save the Earth | 2009 | W.W. Norton & Company | ISBN 978-0393333022 | Author |
Loving This Planet | 2012 | The New Press | ISBN 978-1595580672 | Editor |
Crisis Without End: The Medical and Ecological Consequences of the Fukushima Nuclear Catastrophe | 2014 | The New Press | ISBN 978-1595589606 | Editor |
Sleepwalking to Armageddon | 2017 | The New Press | ISBN 978-1620972465 | Editor |
Caldicott has appeared in numerous documentary films and television programs. In the early 1980s, she was the subject of two documentaries: the Oscar-nominated 1981 feature-length filmEight Minutes to Midnight: A Portrait of Dr. Helen Caldicott and the 1982 Oscar-winningNational Film Board of Canada short documentary,If You Love This Planet.[19]
A 2004 documentary film,Helen's War: Portrait of a Dissident,[20] provides a look into Caldicott's life through the eyes of her niece, filmmaker Anna Broinowski.
Caldicott is featured along with foreign affairs experts, space security activists and military officials in interviews inDenis Delestrac's 2010 feature documentaryPax Americana and the Weaponization of Space.
The 2013 documentaryPandora's Promise also features footage of Caldicott, interspersed with counter-points to her assertions regarding the health impacts of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster.
Title | Director | Production Company | Year |
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The World Awaits | Don Haderlein | 2015 (in production) | |
The Oracles of Pennsylvania Avenue | Tim Wilkerson | 2013 | |
United Natures | Peter Charles Downey | United Natures Independent Media | 2013 |
Pandora's Promise | Robert Stone | Robert Stone Productions, Vulcan Productions | 2013 |
Democracy Now! (TV Series) | Democracy Now | 2011 | |
The University of Nuclear Bombs | Mohamed Elsawi, Joshua James | 2010 | |
Pax Americana and the Weaponization of Space | Denis Delestrac | Coptor Productions Inc., Lowik Media | 2009 |
Difference of Opinion (TV Series) | Australian Broadcasting Corporation | 2007 | |
Poison Dust | Sue Harris | 2005 | |
Fatal Fallout: The Bush Legacy | Gary Null | Gary Null Moving Pictures | 2004 |
Helen's War: Portrait of a Dissident | Anna Broinowski | 2004 | |
American Experience (TV documentary) | WGBH | 1998 | |
In Our Hands | Robert Richter, Stanley Warnow | 1984 | |
If You Love This Planet (short) | Terri Nash | National Film Board of Canada | 1982 |
Eight Minutes to Midnight: A Portrait of Dr. Helen Caldicott | Mary Benjamin | 1981 | |
We are the Guinea Pigs | Joan Harvey | 1980 |
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