Historical Dictionary of Arms Control and DisarmamentScarecrow Press, 2005 - 362 pages Historical Dictionary of Arms Control and Disarmament provides a historical review of key themes and issues in international security and arms control, focusing on efforts in the 20th century to control the spread and use of armaments and to prevent war. This book summarizes the rich and proud traditions of arms control and disarmament, their critical role in ensuring a non-catastrophic course throughout history (especially the dangerous period of the Cold War), and their continuing relevance and role in the emerging post-Cold War world. It also seeks to reinforce a broad perspective of key terms in order to capture the scope and range of their application yesterday, today, and tomorrow. Given this combined tradition and focus, this Dictionary serves two purposes. As a historical dictionary, it chronicles key terms, personalities, events, and agreements as a ready reference from which to launch a more extensive investigation. But it also seeks to capture the breadth of current and future applications by presenting the vocabulary of traditional and non-traditional approaches. The book includes a large dictionary of more than 1,000 key terms, as well as a comprehensive bibliography divided into multiple categories, an extensive chronology, and a timeline. This book can also serve as a useful desk reference for the policy practitioner. The pace and intensity of the practice of arms control often eliminates the luxury of conventional study of past or related arms control efforts. The dictionary seeks to provide a relevant sampling of treaty and agreement details and of the specific terms of reference of arms control to allow productive progress in a policy work environment. Researchers and students will also find the dictionary to be a useful reference tool. Much of the formal literature in the field, such as treaty texts and policy pronouncements, is written in technical language without elaboration. Also, many references to agreements are posed in shorthand intended only for the policy practi |
From inside the book
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Page xxi
... January - 28 June Versailles Peace Conference , Paris , leading to the Versailles Treaty ( World War I peace treaties and German disarmament , including prohibition on poisonous gases , and demilitarization of the left bank of the Rhine ) ...
... January - 28 June Versailles Peace Conference , Paris , leading to the Versailles Treaty ( World War I peace treaties and German disarmament , including prohibition on poisonous gases , and demilitarization of the left bank of the Rhine ) ...
Page xxv
... January Anglo - German Naval Agreement ( limited size of German fleet relative to British fleet ) . London Naval Conference resumes ( through 25 March 1935 ) . 1936 London Naval Limitation Treaty ( bilateral trea- ties between Great ...
... January Anglo - German Naval Agreement ( limited size of German fleet relative to British fleet ) . London Naval Conference resumes ( through 25 March 1935 ) . 1936 London Naval Limitation Treaty ( bilateral trea- ties between Great ...
Page xxvi
... January 4 April 14 June 1944 Bretton Woods Conference , Bretton Woods , New Hampshire ( also known as United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference ) ; 44 nations agreed to create International Monetary Fund and World Bank for ...
... January 4 April 14 June 1944 Bretton Woods Conference , Bretton Woods , New Hampshire ( also known as United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference ) ; 44 nations agreed to create International Monetary Fund and World Bank for ...
Page xxviii
... primary international disarmament negotiat- ing forum from 1954 through 1957 ) . United States makes " Atoms for Peace " proposal to the UN General Assembly . 12 January 2 April 21 July 30 August 8 September xxviii Chronology.
... primary international disarmament negotiat- ing forum from 1954 through 1957 ) . United States makes " Atoms for Peace " proposal to the UN General Assembly . 12 January 2 April 21 July 30 August 8 September xxviii Chronology.
Page xxix
Jeffrey Arthur Larsen, James M. Smith. 12 January 2 April 21 July 30 August 8 September 23 October December 4 February 19 March 10 May 14 May 21 July 8-20 August 4 November 12 July 1954 United States announces policy of massive re ...
Jeffrey Arthur Larsen, James M. Smith. 12 January 2 April 21 July 30 August 8 September 23 October December 4 February 19 March 10 May 14 May 21 July 8-20 August 4 November 12 July 1954 United States announces policy of massive re ...
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Historical Dictionary of Arms Control and Disarmament Jeffrey Arthur Larsen,James M. Smith No preview available - 2005 |
Common terms and phrases
Agency aircraft Anti-Ballistic armament arms control arms control agreement arms control treaties Arms Reduction Treaty Atomic Energy attack Ballistic Missile Defense bilateral bomb bomber capabilities Center chemical weapons Chemical Weapons Convention Cold Cold War Command Commission Committee compliance conflict Control and Disarmament Cooperation created cruise missiles December deployed deterrence entered into force Geneva George H.W. Bush global ICBM Initiative inspections Institute intercontinental ballistic missile Iraq launch mass destruction ment military Moscow National Missile Defense National Security NATO Naval negotiations Nonproliferation North Atlantic Treaty November Nuclear Forces nuclear weapons Peace plutonium President proliferation protocol reactor Russia September signed Soviet Union START II Strategic Arms Limitation Strategic Arms Reduction Strategic Defense Strategic Defense Initiative submarines summit target Test Ban Treaty threat tion tional United Nations uranium USSR verification warheads Warsaw Pact Washington WEAPON FREE ZONE weapon system Weapons Convention weapons of mass World York
Popular passages
Page 4 - It rests essentially on the recognition that our military relation with potential enemies is not one of pure conflict and opposition, but involves strong elements of mutual interest in the avoidance of a war that neither side wants, in minimizing the costs and risks of the arms competition, and in curtailing the scope and violence of war in the event it occurs.
Page xxiii - Convention for the Supervision of the International Trade in Arms and Ammunition and in Implements of War, signed at Geneva June 17, 1925.