This book tells the high stakes story of nuclear technology, its proliferation, and the tense scramble to prevent nuclear weapons from getting in the wrong hands. In The Spread of Nuclear Weapons: A Debate Renewed, professors Waltz and Sagan resume their well-known dialogue concerning nuclear proliferation and the threat of nuclear war.
Originally published in , this volume was unique in its scope and approach: Unlike most literature on nuclear weapons proliferation at the time, the essays in this volume offer theoretical discussions and suggest testable hypotheses Skip to search form Skip to main content Skip to account menu You are currently offline. Some features of the site may not work correctly. Sagan , Kenneth N.
Waltz Published 28 August Political Science In this text, two leading scholars of international politics debate the pros and cons of nuclear weaponry. This text serves as a concise introduction to an issue that encapsulates some of the most basic themes in international relations: are states rational?
Are states sovereign? Does international organization work? New to this second edition is a case study of the precarious relations between India and Pakistan, exploring specific problems and consequences of nuclear competition.
Save to Library Save. Create Alert Alert. Share This Paper. Background Citations. Methods Citations. Citation Type. Background Citations. Methods Citations. Citation Type. Has PDF. Publication Type. More Filters. Japan: A Nuclear State? Abstract Japan is often seen as pacifist and as a defender of nuclear disarmament.
This article, though, sustains that Japan is basing its security on extended nuclear deterrence, and on the … Expand. Nuclear weapons have been studied extensively in the literature, but seldom with a focus on their effects vis a vis non-state actors and levels of non-state violence.
This paper proposes a systematic … Expand. Nuclear Stability in South Asia. International Security. An examination of the onset, evolution, and termination of the and crises between India and Pakistan suggests that nuclear deterrence is robust in South Asia.
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