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PROHIBITION TREATY (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   154205


After the prohibition treaty: a practical agenda to reduce nuclear dangers / Dunn, Lewis A   Journal Article
Dunn, Lewis A Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Frustrated by the bilateral and multilateral arms control stalemate and energized by concerns about the risk of nuclear weapons use, more than 120 non-nuclear-weapon states have just adopted a nuclear weapons prohibition treaty that will be opened for signature in September.
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2
ID:   158681


Normalizing zero nuclear weapons: the humanitarian road to the Prohibition Treaty / Hanson, Marianne   Journal Article
Hanson, Marianne Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The nuclear age has come to be seen as “normal,” marked by a process of “nuclearism” whereby nuclear weapons and deterrence are seen as inevitable and acceptable elements of international security. Factors which have allowed this to flourish include the relative absence of humanitarian considerations, nuclear decision-making by a select few, and the unequal nature of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), where the P5 states have shaped the nuclear order on their own terms. The “humanitarian initiative” and Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons challenge this “normal” nature of nuclear weapons, re-casting them as incompatible with humanitarian law, and delegitimizing them for all states. This shift away from the structural constraints of the NPT allows non-nuclear states a degree of agency they did not previously possess. Nonetheless, the Treaty faces difficulty in dislodging the practices of the nuclear-weapon states, suggesting that its value lies in its long-term normative influence.
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