Reconceptualising Arms Control

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ABM Treaty
Air Force Space Command
Arms Control
Arms Control Challenges
Arms Control Paradigm
Arms Control Practice
arms trade networks
Arms Trade Treaty
bombs
Bureaucratic Politics Paradigm
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challenges
cluster
Cluster Munitions
cold
Cold War Arms Control
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human
Human Security
humanitarian disarmament
Illicit Flows
Illicit Networks
International Humanitarian Law
international security studies
National Security Strategy
NATO Doctrine
Nuclear Disarmament
nuclear nonproliferation
Nuclear Posture Review
outer space militarisation
post-cold war arms control challenges
practice
SALW
Securitizing Move
small
Small Arms Control
small arms regulation
Small Arms Survey
Start Agreement
suicide
terrorism
Threat NATO
UK Royal Commission
war

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415688833
  • Weight: 680g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Oct 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The theory and practice of arms control seemed to have its heyday during the height of the Cold War, with its focus on the East-West conflict and nuclear arms. In the past twenty years, both arms technologies and various practices aimed at their control have continued to develop, but scholarly thinking has not kept up. This volume seeks to redress this scholarly neglect of the range of issues associated with the control of the means of violence, by asking the question: what does arms control mean in the 21st Century?

In asking this question, the volume examines issues surrounding sovereignty, geopolitics, nuclear disarmament, securitization of space, technological developments, human rights, the clearance of landmines, the regulation of small arms and the control of the black market for arms and nuclear secrets. The book discusses terrorism with reference to the case of the suicide attacks in Beirut in 1983 and how the Obama administration is orientating its posture on nuclear arms.

This book was published as a special issue of Contemporary Security Policy.

Neil Cooper is Senior Lecturer in International Relations and Security Studies in the Division of Peace Studies, at the University of Bradford. David Mutimer is Deputy Director of the Centre for International and Security Studies and Associate Professor of Political Science at York University.