23 research outputs found
Strategic Concept for the Regulation of Arms Possession and Proliferation
In practice there is still a âpiecemeal approach towards proliferationâ and argued that a genuinely comprehensive and global approach to non-proliferation would involve the integration of policy âon nuclear and other WMD non- proliferation, arms control, and disarmament with strategy on conventional weapons to implement a holistic approach within a new Strategic Concept for the Regulation of Arms Possession and Proliferation.
A major push is needed, not just to control the conventional weapons trade, but also to âreduce holdings of major weapons systems, ordnance stocks and production.
There are longstanding legal commitment in the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty to âgeneral disarmamentâ of all weapons apart from those needed for internal policing.
In terms of timescale, one could look at getting the job done in the course of a decade. If we have timetables for global warming, and if we think that it is practical to get to grips with the entire climate of the planet, we should also see that it is practical to get to grips with weaponry
Casting for a sovereign role:Socialising an aspirant state in the Scottish independence referendum
This article examines international reactions to Scotlandâs 2014 bid for independence as an instance of socialisation of an aspirant state, what we term âpre-socialisationâ. Building on and contributing to research on state socialisation and role theory, this study proposes a nexus between roles and sovereignty. This nexus has three components: sovereignty itself is a role casted for by an actor; the sovereign role is entangled with the substantive foreign policy roles the actor might play; and the sovereign role implicates the substantive foreign policy roles of other actors. The Scottish debate on independence provides an effective laboratory to develop and explore these theoretical dimensions of pre-socialisation, revealing the contested value and meaning of sovereignty, the possible roles that an independent Scotland could play, and the projected implications for the role of the UK and other international actors. Our analysis of the Scottish case can provide insights for other cases of pre-socialisation and is more empirically significant following the UKâs 2016 referendum to leave the European Union.PostprintPeer reviewe
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Think Again â Supplying War: Reappraising Military Logistics and Its Centrality to Strategy and War
This article argues that logistics constrains strategic opportunity while itself being heavily circumscribed by strategic and operational planning. With the academic literature all but ignoring the centrality of logistics to strategy and war, this article argues for a reappraisal of the critical role of military logistics, and posits that the study and conduct of war and strategy are incomplete at best or false at worst when they ignore this crucial component of the art of war. The article conceptualises the logisticsâstrategy nexus in a novel way, explores its contemporary manifestation in an age of uncertainty, and applies it to a detailed case study of UK operations in Iraq and Afghanistan since 2001