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The Outlook for Disarmament

2020
Throughout history, nations have sought to ensure or improve their security through armaments. Through the League of Nations after the First World War and the United Nations after the Second World War, nations sought security through an international organization and system, the main pillars of which were the peaceful settlements of disputes ...
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The necessity for disarmament

Medicine and War, 1993
While recent progress in nuclear and chemical weapons disarmament is very welcome, much more needs to be done and there is no room for complacency.
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The Failure of Disarmament

1986
German acceptance of the Armistice on 11 November 1918 occasioned immense relief from war-weary peoples and widespread hope that peace could now be secured on a lasting basis. President Woodrow Wilson, having led the United States into a ‘war to end war’, cherished the expectation of realising a permanent peace.
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Congress and Disarmament

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 1963
(1963). Congress and Disarmament. Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists: Vol. 19, No. 7, pp. 3-8.
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Disarmament for Development [PDF]

open access: possible, 1989
It has long been argued that the United Nations Charter defines for the UN a central role in the promotion of both disarmament and development, and it is under the auspices of the UN that much of the discussion of the relationship between disarmament and development has occurred.
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The Conditions of Disarmament

The Antioch Review, 1955
THE PRESIDENT electrified the Geneva conference when he suddenly proposed an exchange of military blueprints with Russia, followed by mutual aerial reconnaissance, in order to eliminate the fear of surprise attack. Was this, the world wondered, the bold new plan which could banish the fear of an atomic war?
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SURPRISE ATTACK AND DISARMAMENT [PDF]

open access: possibleSurvival, 1959
‘Disarmament’ has covered a variety of schemes, some ingenious and some sentimental, for co-operation among potential enemies to reduce the likelihood of war or to reduce its scope and violence. Most proposals have taken as a premise that a reduction in the quantity and potency of weapons, particularly of ‘offensive’ weapons and of weapons that either ...
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Disarmament in Mozambique

Journal of Southern African Studies, 1998
The United Nations’ failure to effect meaningful disarmament during its ONUMOZ operation in Mozambique has had serious consequences, especially for South Africa. For ONUMOZ to have disarmed all armed individuals would have been an impossible task, but the weapons it did obtain and which were earmarked for decommissioning could have been destroyed ...
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General and complete disarmament and the comprehensive programme of disarmament

1988
General and complete disarmament has been implicitly understood to be the final objective of the United Nations disarmament efforts since the inception of the Organization and has been pursued along two parallel paths. During most of the 1950s, a long-term approach dominated, which envisaged the regulation, limitation and balanced reduction of all ...
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