ABSTRACT

This volume evaluates the impact of coercive arms control efforts to curb the spread of weapons of mass destruction in the twenty-first century.

A new paradigm in arms control is gradually replacing the idea that mutually agreed restrictions on armaments can improve international security. Thus, Hedley Bull’s classic definition of arms control as the "cooperation between antagonistic pairs of states in military affairs" needs to be amended by a new notion of coercive arms control as the set of non-cooperative and non-reciprocal measures to restrict the weapons or military capabilities of certain states.

This volume addresses the topic of how this ongoing paradigmatic shift will affect the effectiveness of arms control as a conflict management instrument.While some argue that new instruments can complement and strengthen traditional, multilateral and inclusive arms control regimes, others maintain that conflicts and contradictions between coercive and cooperative arms control regimes will severely limit their effectiveness. This volume provides a forum for academics and practitioners from around the globe to discuss these developments in depth and to assess the specific strengths and weaknesses of these new instruments of arms control.

This book will be of much interest to students of arms control, global governance, foreign policy and IR/Security Studies in general.

part |11 pages

Introduction

part |88 pages

Effectiveness and legitimacy of new arms control instruments

part |64 pages

Prospects for a new arms control agenda – diverging views

chapter |21 pages

A non-proliferation (r)evolution

US arms control and non-proliferation policy under Bush and Obama

chapter |18 pages

A new transatlantic approach?

A view from Europe

chapter |12 pages

Prospects for a new arms control agenda

An Indian perspective

chapter |11 pages

Prospects for a new arms control agenda

View from the Middle East