Thanks for joining us at the 2024 Outrider Nuclear Reporting Summit
Public awareness about nuclear threats has never been more vital. Last year, we convened journalists at the nexus of health, climate, and national security to deepen their knowledge about how these issues are interconnected in the new nuclear landscape.
December 5-6, 2024KFF's Barbara Jordan Conference Center, Washington, D.C.
The inaugural Outrider Nuclear Reporting Summit gathered media practitioners, national security experts, policymakers, and scientists. This free, two-day conference and training focused on how nuclear weapons issues intersect with artificial intelligence, community health, climate change, local economies, and the environment.

Program Schedule

When Climate Change Threatens National Security
In the past year, forest fires have threatened weapons plants in the U.S. while warming ocean temperatures have and will continue to impact nuclear submarine operations in unexpected ways. This panel will discuss the consequences of climate change on national security and strategies to anticipate and address them.
Justin Worland
Senior Correspondent, TIME
Jamie Kwong
Fellow, Nuclear Policy Program, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
Karl V. D'Ambrosio
Nuclear Submarine Officer, Commander (Ret.), US Navy
Sherri Goodman
Author, "Threat Multiplier: Climate, Military Leadership and the Fight for Global Security"
A New U.S. President and New Nuclear Weapons: A Global Perspective
Will the next president resist or embrace a new nuclear arms race as the U.S. upgrades its 400 land-based ICBM nuclear missiles in Montana, Wyoming, and North Dakota with the Sentinel program? How does that over-budget program — which will also see support and testing in Utah and Arizona — compare to nuclear stockpiles and capabilities in the eight other nuclear nations?
Hans M. Kristensen
Director, Nuclear Information Project, Federation of American Scientists
Sharon Squassoni
Professor, Elliott School of International Affairs, George Washington University
The Hidden Health Impacts of Nuclear Weapons Production
Making nuclear weapons is a hazardous process — and workers mining radioactive materials, soldiers maintaining missiles underground, and citizens who built communities on top of contaminated soil have been lied to for decades about the causes of generational health problems. But grassroots activists and whistleblowers are challenging that history.
Robert K. Elder
President & CEO, Outrider Foundation
Dawn Chapman
Co-founder of Just Moms STL
Alex Ruiz
Alex Ruiz, Co-Director, The Torchlight Initiative
Sébastien Philippe
Research Scholar, Program on Science and Global Security, Princeton University
Asking the Right Questions and Finding Overlooked Stories
When a story breaks, the real news is often hidden behind the initial press releases and official talking points. Here, our panelists discuss finding knowledgeable experts, challenging established narratives, and finding revealing stories in unexpected places.
John Mecklin
Editor-in-chief, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.
Victoria Samson
Chief Director, Space Security and Stability, Secure World Foundation
Tomas Statius
Investigative journalist, Lighthouse Reports
Nuclear Treaties, the Nobel Peace Prize and the Imagery of Nuclear Weapons
Beatrice Fihn served as the executive director of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) when it won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2017. This year, Fihn founded Lex International, a philanthropic fund "to develop and strengthen international law to solve global challenges." She'll talk about her career and her newest project, which examines the photography used by news media to depict nuclear weapons—and what a recent study reveals.
Beatrice Fihn
Director, Lex International and Senior Fellow, United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research
Alex Toma
Philanthropy and peace expert, Executive Director at Peace and Security Funders Group
Friday, December 6
The Future is Now: Artificial Intelligence and National Security
When AI is discussed in security circles, it often devolves into abstract conversations about the future, with references to science fiction and, inevitably, a humanity-destroying Skynet from The Terminator movies. But AI applications in nuclear security are happening now in everything from mapping to advanced targeting, wargaming, strategies, and concrete ways that might surprise you. This panel explores what’s currently happening and what’s possible in the future of AI and nuclear security.
Thom Shanker
Director, Project for Media and National Security at George Washington University
Leah Walker
Lab Director, Berkeley Risk and Security Lab
Nicole Tisdale
Founder & Principal, Advocacy Blueprints
Nuclear Weapons: Then and Now, in Space and on Earth
In a wide-ranging conversation, Gen. C. Robert "Bob" Kehler (ret), former Commander of U.S. Strategic Command, will talk with W.J. Hennigan of The New York Times about his career and how nuclear strategy has changed over his lifetime—and how it might evolve in the future. Topics covered will include AI, the intersection of climate change and national security, and Kehler’s experience as a missileer in the West.
Gen. C. Robert Kehler, USAF, Ret.
Former Commander, U.S. Strategic Command
W.J. Hennigan
Correspondent, New York Times Opinion

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