Nuclear War as a Predictable Surprise

Global Policy, 13/5 (November 2022): 782-91.

10 Pages Posted: 28 Sep 2022 Last revised: 28 Nov 2022

Date Written: September 6, 2022

Abstract

Like asteroids, hundred-year floods and pandemic disease, thermonuclear war is a low-frequency, high-impact threat. In the long run, catastrophe is inevitable if nothing is done − yet each successive government and generation may fail to address it. Drawing on risk perception research, this paper argues that psychological biases cause the threat of nuclear war to receive less attention than it deserves. Nuclear deterrence is, moreover, a ‘front-loaded good’: its benefits accrue disproportionately to proximate generations, whereas much of the expected cost will be borne in the distant future. Recent surveys indicate that the US and Russian publics assign a surprisingly high likelihood to nuclear war. Nevertheless, earlier research suggests that it is probably not believed to be just around the corner. This, along with the absence of easy solutions, encourages governments and publics to give priority to more pressing concerns. The danger is that the pattern will continue clear up to the point that nuclear war arrives.

Keywords: nuclear war, catastrophic risk, existential risk, risk perception, intergenerational ethics

Suggested Citation

Rendall, Matthew, Nuclear War as a Predictable Surprise (September 6, 2022). Global Policy, 13/5 (November 2022): 782-91., Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4221156

Matthew Rendall (Contact Author)

University of Nottingham ( email )

School of Politics and International Relations
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United Kingdom
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HOME PAGE: http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/politics/staff/matthew.rendall

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