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Almost the entire southern hemisphere is now covered by nuclear-weapon-free zones. The ones in Latin America and the South Pacific were established during the Cold War, those in Southeast Asia and Africa after its ending. Zones have also been proposed, so far without success, for the Middle East, South Asia and Northeast Asia. In this book, analysts from within the respective regions explore the reasons for success and failure in the establishment of the zone, and their utility and limitations as stepping stones to a nuclear-weapon-free world.
The twenty articles in this report emanated from a conference in May 1994. Topics include security and disarmament; prospects for improving non-proliferation mechanisms; dealing with clandestine nuclear activities; the roles, responsibilities and management of nuclear weapons states; the technical potential for proliferation in Northeast Asian states; regional perspectives--Japan, the Korean peninsula, the USA, and Russia; and inter-relations between regional and global approaches. The final chapter includes the October 1994 US- DPRK agreement. No index. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
Details North Korea's technology, infrastructure, and institutions and discusses difficulties the country faces in creating alternatives to a nuclear weapons program within the context of maintaining environmentally sound, ecologically sustainable energy development in the region. Contains sections on nuclear reactors and technology transfer, economic sanctions and incentives, strategy and confidence building, and Korea and the major powers. Includes appendices of documents. Paper edition (unseen), $24.95. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
The twenty articles in this report emanated from a conference in May 1994. Topics include security and disarmament; prospects for improving non-proliferation mechanisms; dealing with clandestine nuclear activities; the roles, responsibilities and management of nuclear weapons states; the technical potential for proliferation in Northeast Asian states; regional perspectives--Japan, the Korean peninsula, the USA, and Russia; and inter-relations between regional and global approaches. The final chapter includes the October 1994 US- DPRK agreement. No index. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.
The contemporary nuclear landscape is rife with challenges. Stagnated progress in disarmament, widespread modernization plans, and emergent proliferation pathways are contributing to the risk of catastrophe. Meanwhile, global nuclear order appears more precarious than ever. This book makes a case for a regional reorientation of the nuclear nonproliferation regime, arguing that a more specialized, decentralized, and localized arrangement could more effectively address post-Cold War challenges. In the process, it develops a framework to analyze the conditions that would allow for more robust regional nuclear cooperation.?? Regional Pathways to Nuclear Nonproliferation includes a series of case studies, centering on Northeast Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East. It provides a comprehensive overview of existing nuclear cooperation at the regional level, including in the context of nuclear-weapon-free zones. For each case, the book both analyzes the viability of a stronger regional nuclear order and considers the form such an order would likely take. What is the magnitude and character of the nuclear proliferation threat across different regions? What does the presence of institutions in economic, environmental, and human security domains suggest about the likelihood of addressing that threat? A better understanding of broader regional patterns may be the key to explaining the possibility of regional nuclear cooperation. It may also help identify means to effectuate the timing and scale of that cooperation, bolstering regional nuclear orders and, in turn, ensuring the viability of global nuclear order.