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ID115280
Title ProperUN arms trade treaty
Other Title Informationarms export controls, the human security agenda and the lessons of history
LanguageENG
AuthorBromley, Mark ;  Cooper, Neil ;  Holtom, Paul
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The UN conference to negotiate an Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) concluded on 27 July 2012 without reaching consensus on the text of a draft treaty and saw both the US and Russia calling for more time to negotiate. The ATT process marks the latest in a series of attempts to insert human security concerns into arms export controls. The setback in July raises questions about the current level of international support for the human security agenda, as well as the relative power of different actors to shape global governance structures. This article locates the ATT negotiations in the broader history of multilateral efforts to regulate the international arms trade, from the 1890 Brussels Act to post-Cold War initiatives. The historical record shows that such efforts are more likely to succeed if they are negotiated or imposed by major arms exporters. The introduction of human security concerns, as well as the merging of export control and arms control agendas, went some way towards reversing this trend. In particular, it created a broad international coalition of supportive states and NGOs from the global North and South. Yet disagreements over the purpose of an ATT remained. The draft ATT included human security provisions, but China, Russia, the US and a number of emerging powers ensured that state security considerations remained paramount in decision-making on arms exports. The US was the first major actor to announce its unwillingness to sign the draft ATT in July 2012 and two alternative interpretations of US actions are considered. The article concludes by considering the options available to supporters of the ATT process following the 2012 conference and examines the notion that the ATT campaign has become an initiative 'out of its time', one that might have had success in the 1990s but not in current circumstances.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Affairs Vol. 88, No.5; Sep 2012: p.1029-1048
Journal SourceInternational Affairs Vol. 88, No.5; Sep 2012: p.1029-1048
Key WordsArms Trade Treaty (ATT) ;  United States ;  Russia ;  Human Security ;  International Arms Trade ;  United Nations


 
 
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