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NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION TREATY (8) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   098799


2010 NPT review conference: some breathing space gained, but no breakthrough / Muller, Harald   Journal Article
Muller, Harald Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract The eighth Review Conference of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty ended on 28 May with a consensus final document. A further deepening of the non-proliferation regime's crisis was thus avoided. The more cooperative policy of the Obama administration was one of the main reasons for this partial success which was assisted by the pragmatic negotiation posture of some moderate non-aligned states. However, the result is a compromise at the level of the lowest common denominator: the parties did not agree on bold steps towards nuclear disarmament, nor did they strengthen the toolbox for non-proliferation. In the end, the most outstanding result was the plan for a conference on ways and means to foster a Middle East nuclear weapon-free zone.
Key Words NPT  NAM  IAEA  Nuclear Proliferation Treaty 
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2
ID:   016515


An equal opportunity-NPT / Subrahmanyam, K June 1993  Article
Subrahmanyam, K Article
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Publication June 1993.
Description 37-39
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3
ID:   011629


Brazil and the NPT: Resistance to change? / Wrobel, paulo S Sept 1996  Article
Wrobel, paulo S Article
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Publication Sept 1996.
Description 337-347
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4
ID:   016230


India and NPT / Viswam S May 1993  Article
Viswam S Article
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Publication May 1993.
Description 17-20
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5
ID:   083126


Multilateralism, bilateralism, and exclusion in the nuclear pro / Verdier, Daniel   Journal Article
Verdier, Daniel Journal Article
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Publication 2008.
Summary/Abstract use the nuclear proliferation regime to show that dyadic diplomacy is not necessarily incompatible with the building of a multilateral regime; bilateralism is not the opposite of multilateralism, but an efficient component thereof. Although this point will not be new to most students of institutions, no general rationale has so far been offered on the complementarity of bilateral and multilateral diplomacy. Starting from a characterization of proliferation as the result of a large number of prisoner's dilemmas played out between states engaged in local dyadic rivalries, I demonstrate that it is possible for the superpowers to design an optimal mix of threats and bribes in which states with low compliance costs join the regime on the terms of the multilateral treaty alone; states with intermediate compliance costs need additional customized incentives, delivered through bilateral agreements; and states with high compliance costs are not only left out of the regime but also punished for nonparticipation. I draw a few comparative statics that I systematically test on Nuclear Proliferation Treaty (NPT) membership data. I discuss the applicability of the model to the currency, trade, and aid regimes.
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6
ID:   016228


Non proliferation treaty May 1993  Article
Article
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Publication May 1993.
Key Words NPT  Nuclear Proliferation Treaty 
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7
ID:   016229


NPT and Israel Pakistan, North Korea / Subramanian, R R May 1993  Article
Subramanian, R R Article
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Publication May 1993.
Description 12-14
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8
ID:   097035


Nuclear dominoes: real or imagined / Procida, Frank   Journal Article
Procida, Frank Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
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