Challenging Nuclearism: A humanitarian framework to reshape the global nuclear order
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Challenging Nuclearism: A humanitarian framework to reshape the global nuclear order

APLN member Marianne Hanson published a book titled, “Transforming Nuclear Safeguards Culture: The IAEA, Iraq, and the Future of Non-Proliferation.” The following is a summary of the book. You can buy the book through the link here.

Challenging nuclearism explores how a deliberate ‘normalisation’ of nuclear weapons has been constructed, why it has prevailed in international politics for over seventy years and why it is only now being questioned seriously. The book identifies several elements of ‘nuclearism’ to show how particular practices have enabled a small group of states to hold vast arsenals of these most destructive of all weapons of mass destruction. It argues that the evolution of nuclear discourses and the close control over nuclear decisions by a select group of government and policy elites has meant that the humanitarian consequences of nuclear weapons have been largely disregarded for decades. The dominance of nuclearism has also allowed a particular nuclear order to flourish, one which has been remarkably resistant to change. Against the backdrop of the successful application of a ‘humanitarian arms control’ approach to landmines and cluster munitions, several non-nuclear states and civil society actors forged a platform called the ‘Humanitarian Initiative on Nuclear Weapons’. This allowed new voices into the previously unassailable world of nuclear politics, and led to a landmark agreement, the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. The treaty determines that because they violate the basic principles of international humanitarian law, nuclear weapons are now deemed to be illegitimate, immoral, and illegal for all states.

The treaty will not bring about quick disarmament. It has been decried by the nuclear weapon states. But by rejecting nuclearism and providing a clear denunciation of nuclear weapons, the treaty – and the Humanitarian Initiative more broadly – will challenge nuclear states in a way that has until now not been possible. Challenging nuclearism analyses the origins and repercussions of this pivotal moment in nuclear politics.

Image: Book Cover