We are all Americans

June 21st, 2003 | RESEARCH

"Weapons of mass destruction" is the word of the year 2002, at least according to the American Dialect Society, an association which has been studying the English language in North America for more than one century and which yearly chooses the word having more relevance to American society and information. The word of the year 2001 was "Nine eleven", and the passing of the baton was very significant. September 11th has actually marked an extraordinary media watershed in the debate on the dangerousness of weapons of mass destruction. The bioterrorist threat, for instance, seems to have gained ground in newspaper pages and in programme schedules - and therefore in people's houses - together with anthrax letters terrorising America. However, though this lethal powder has remained confined beyond the Atlantic, fear has rapidly spread throughout the world, including Italy.

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Team Members

Paola Coppola, Author
Giancarlo Sturloni, Author

Citation

Identifier Type: ISSN
Identifier: 1824-2049

Publication: Journal of Science Communication
Volume: 2
Number: 2

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Audience: Administration | Leadership | Policymakers | General Public | Scientists
Discipline: General STEM | History | policy | law | Technology
Resource Type: Peer-reviewed article | Research Products
Environment Type: Comics | Books | Newspapers | Media and Technology