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India's Nuclear Bomb: The Impact on Global Proliferation
George W. Rathjens
- 01 Nov 1999
TL;DR: Peng et al. as discussed by the authors present a comprehensive history of India's nuclear program, including interviews with key scientists, military leaders, diplomats and politicians, as well as declassified U.S. government documents and interviews with American officials.
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Abstract: In May 1998, India shocked the world - and many of its own citizens - by detonating five nuclear weapons in the Rajasthan desert. Why did India bid for nuclear weapon status at a time when 149 nations had signed a ban on nuclear testing? What drove India's new Hindu nationalist government to depart from decades of nuclear restraint, a control that no other nation with similar capacities had displayed? How has U.S. nonproliferation policy affected India's decision making? "India's Nuclear Bomb" is the definitive, comprehensive history of how the world's largest democracy, has grappled with the twin desires to have and to renounce the bomb. Each chapter contains significant historical revelations drawn from scores of interviews with India's key scientists, military leaders, diplomats and politicians, and from declassified U.S. government documents and interviews with U.S. officials. Perkovich teases out the cultural and ethical concerns and vestiges of colonialism that underlie India's seemingly paradoxical stance. India's nuclear history challenges leading theories of why nations pursue and hang onto nuclear weapons, raising important questions for international relations theory and security studies. So, too, the blasts in Rajasthan have shaken the foundations of the international nonproliferation system. With the end of the Cold War and an even more chaotic international scene, Perkovich's analysis of an alternative model is timely, sobering, and vital.
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Citations
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Being Nuclear: Africans and the Global Uranium Trade
Gabrielle Hecht
- 02 Mar 2012
TL;DR: Gabrielle Hecht as discussed by the authors put Africa in the nuclear world, and the nuclear worlds in Africa, focusing on miners and the occupational hazard of radiation exposure, and showed that questions about being nuclear lie at the heart of today's global nuclear order and the relationships between developing nations and nuclear powers.
394
Determinants of Nuclear Weapons Proliferation
Dong-Joon Jo,Erik Gartzke +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the determinants of proliferation and the policy option for nuclear weapons proliferation and present diverse opinions about these determinants and their impact on the policy options.
The Correlates of Nuclear Proliferation A Quantitative Test
Sonali Singh,Christopher Way +1 more
TL;DR: Fears of rogue states, withdrawal of cold war-era security guarantees, a falling technological threshold, and availability to terrorist organizations ensure that nuclear weapons proliferation will continue to accelerate as discussed by the authors.
291
The Secret Success of Nonproliferation Sanctions
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that economic and political sanctions are a successful tool of nonproliferation policy, but that selection effects have rendered this success largely hidden, and that only insulated, inward-looking regimes have pursued nuclear weapons and become the target of imposed sanctions.
Making It Personal: Regime Type and Nuclear Proliferation
TL;DR: This paper found that leaders of highly centralized, ''personalistic'' dictatorships are particularly likely to view nuclear weapons as an attractive solution to their concerns about regime security and face fewer constraints in pursuing nuclear weapons than leaders of other types of regimes.
129
References
•Book
Being Nuclear: Africans and the Global Uranium Trade
Gabrielle Hecht
- 02 Mar 2012
TL;DR: Gabrielle Hecht as discussed by the authors put Africa in the nuclear world, and the nuclear worlds in Africa, focusing on miners and the occupational hazard of radiation exposure, and showed that questions about being nuclear lie at the heart of today's global nuclear order and the relationships between developing nations and nuclear powers.
394
The Correlates of Nuclear Proliferation A Quantitative Test
Sonali Singh,Christopher Way +1 more
TL;DR: Fears of rogue states, withdrawal of cold war-era security guarantees, a falling technological threshold, and availability to terrorist organizations ensure that nuclear weapons proliferation will continue to accelerate as discussed by the authors.
291
The Secret Success of Nonproliferation Sanctions
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that economic and political sanctions are a successful tool of nonproliferation policy, but that selection effects have rendered this success largely hidden, and that only insulated, inward-looking regimes have pursued nuclear weapons and become the target of imposed sanctions.
Norm challenges and norm death: The inexplicable?:
Diana Panke,Ulrich Petersohn +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate successful norm challenges and analyze the conditions that lead to the abolition of norms rather than to limitations of the norms, and develop hypotheses on mechanisms, success and outcomes.
80
•Posted Content
Targeting Nuclear Programs in War and Peace: A Quantitative Empirical Analysis, 1941-2000
Matthew Fuhrmann,Sarah E. Kreps +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that states are likely to attack or consider attacking nuclear facilities when they are highly threatened by a particular country's acquisition of nuclear weapons and that three factors increase the salience of the proliferation threat: prior violent militarized conflict, the presence of a highly autocratic proliferator, and divergent foreign policy interests.
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