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ARMS PROLIFERATION (7) answer(s).
 
SrlItem
1
ID:   045971


Arms deffusion: the spread of military innovations in the international system / Zarzecki, Thomas W 2002  Article
Zarzecki, Thomas W Article
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Publication New York, Routledge, 2002.
Description xiii, 290p.
Standard Number 0415935148
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Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
046974327.1743/ZAR 046974MainOn ShelfGeneral 
2
ID:   137798


China and the free-rider problem: exploring the case of energy security / Kennedy, Andrew B   Article
Kennedy, Andrew B Article
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Summary/Abstract IS CHINA PULLING ITS WEIGHT IN THE INTERNATIONAL SYSTEM? In recent years, China has increased its contribution to United Nations peacekeeping, raised its foreign aid to impoverished countries, and made significant commitments to global arms control initiatives.1 Even so, a rising chorus of voices has charged that China is “free riding” on cooperation undertaken by the United States and other countries that provides benefits to the wider international community. Calling China a free rider is nothing new; scholars described China as free riding on nuclear arms control agreements and international environmental cooperation as early as the 1990s.2 Yet with the United States beset by financial and economic woes in recent years, allegations that Beijing free rides on the United States and other countries have grown more frequent and more impatient. Whether the issue is fighting terrorism or preventing nuclear proliferation, it has become routine—particularly in the United States—to complain that China is not doing enough to support international cooperation.3 The number of articles containing both of the terms “China” and “free rider” in the Factiva database, for example, increased from an average of 39 per year from 2005 to 2009 to 75 per year from 2010 to 2013. Chinese observers, meanwhile, argue among themselves whether China free rides (da bian che) on the collective action of other states.4 Some agree that China should be seen as a free rider, at least in some areas.5 Other Chinese writers disagree and reject the notion that China should take on “even more responsibility” for global governance.
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3
ID:   061403


Paradox of peacebuilding: peril, promise, and small arms in Tajikistan / Heathershaw, John 2005  Journal Article
Heathershaw, John Journal Article
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Publication 2005.
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4
ID:   056038


Philippine security threatened by small-arms proliferation / Davis , Anthony Aug 2003  Journal Article
Davis , anthony Journal Article
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5
ID:   012735


Political economy of conventional arms proliferation / Keller Wiliam W April 1997  Article
Keller Wiliam W Article
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Publication April 1997.
Description 179-183
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6
ID:   006892


Report of the Presidential Advisory Board on arms proliferation policy / Janne E Nolan et al. 1995  Book
Nolan Janne E Book
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Publication White House, 1995.
Description 30p.
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
038842R 388.82/NOL 038842MainOn ShelfGeneral 
7
ID:   061402


Wash with weapons?: the case of small arms in Kyrgyzstan / Macfarlane, S Neil 2005  Journal Article
Macfarlane, S Neil Journal Article
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Publication 2005.
Key Words Small arms  Light weapons  Arms proliferation  Central Asia  Kyrgyzstan 
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