000 | 00433nam a2200145Ia 4500 | ||
---|---|---|---|
999 |
_c176145 _d176145 |
||
020 | _a9780415580984 | ||
040 | _cCUS | ||
082 |
_a327.1747 _bNJO/N |
||
245 | 0 |
_aNuclear prolilferation and international order/ _bchallenges to the non-proliferation treaty _cNjolstad, Olav [ed.] |
|
250 | _a1st ed. | ||
260 |
_aLondon: _bRoutledge, _c2011. |
||
300 | _a282 p. | ||
505 | _a1 Introduction: the present nuclear order, how it came about, why it may not last HANS BLIX PART I Challenge from outside: the problem of non-legal nuclear weapon states 2 The Indian nuclear program: motivations, effects, and future trajectories S. PAUL KAPUR 3 Pakistan's nuclear weapons programme: past and future BHUMITRA CHAKMA 4 Israel's nuclear capability: implications on Middle East security MOHAMED KADRY SAID PART II Challenges from within: the NPT defectors 5 How to bring North Korea back into the NPT LEON V. SIGAL 6 Challenge from within: the case of Iran SVERRE LODGAARD PART III Challenge from below: nuclear trafficking and terrorism 7 The threat of nuclear terrorism MORTEN BREMER M^^RLI 8 The atomic terrorist? JOHN MUELLER PART IV Challenge from above: the unfulfilled nuclear disarmament pledge of the five legal nuclear-weapon states 9 The United States and the NPT "double bargain" DAVID HOLLOWAY 10 The nuclear policy of Russia and the perspectives for nuclear disarmament VLADIMIR DVORKIN 11 Creating "nuclear order": an open-ended process SERGEY OZNOBISHCHEV 12 The UK, responsible nuclear sovereignty and the disarmament threshold WILLIAM WALKER 13 France and nuclear non-proliferation: from benign neglect to active promotion BRUNO TERTRAIS 14 Departing revolution: China's changing nuclear policies during the Cold War CHEN JIAN 15 China's policy on nuclear weapons and disarmament YAO YUNZHU | ||
942 | _cAC8 |