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York, Herbert F. – Physics Today, 1983
Treaties, protocols, international conventions, and unilateral restraint, while not true solutions to nuclear war, can buy time and move us in the right direction. Past treaties, treaties now in force, and uncompleted treaties (those attempted or proposed), unilateral actions, and the freeze movement are discussed. (JN)
Descriptors: Disarmament, Higher Education, International Relations, National Defense
Hollander, Jack, Ed. – 1982
A symposium was organized to reexamine the realities of vertical proliferation between the United States and the Soviet Union and to place into perspective the horizontal proliferation of nuclear weapons throughout the world, including the possible role of commercial nuclear power in facilitating proliferation. The four invited symposium…
Descriptors: Disarmament, International Relations, Nuclear Energy, Nuclear Technology
Morrison, Philip; And Others – 1983
Three papers on nuclear weapons and nuclear war, based on talks given by distinguished physicists during an American Physical Society-sponsored symposium, are provided in this booklet. They include "Caught Between Asymptotes" (Philip Morrison), "We are not Inferior to the Soviets" (Hans A. Bethe), and "MAD vs. NUTS"…
Descriptors: Armed Forces, Disarmament, International Relations, National Defense
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Brazier, William F.; Hellman, Joel S. – Social Policy, 1987
The following two themes form the foundation of Mikhail Gorbachev's world view: (1) nuclear arms have reached a new complexity in technical development and numbers, and in ability to control the weapons; and (2) a new trend in international relations is moving away from competition and rivalry and towards "interdependence" and…
Descriptors: Disarmament, Foreign Policy, Futures (of Society), Global Approach
Department of State, Washington, DC. Bureau of Public Affairs. – 1988
Designed to explore the interests and objectives of U.S. foreign policy, this book addresses: (1) national security and arms control; (2) economic programs and trends; (3) human rights efforts; (4) science and technological developments; (5) relationships with various world regions; and (6) the need for an adequate foreign affairs budget. Chapter…
Descriptors: Budgets, Civil Rights, Disarmament, Economic Development