Talking Peace, Making Weapons: IAEA Technical Cooperation and Nuclear Proliferation
A growing literature suggests that nuclear assistance from other countries is an important determinant of whether states pursue nuclear weapons. Existing work does not consider, however, the most widely available source of assistance—the Technical Cooperation (TC) program administered by the Interna...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of conflict resolution 2014-04, Vol.58 (3), p.402-428 |
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description | A growing literature suggests that nuclear assistance from other countries is an important determinant of whether states pursue nuclear weapons. Existing work does not consider, however, the most widely available source of assistance—the Technical Cooperation (TC) program administered by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). IAEA assistance is an important piece of the nonproliferation regime's central bargain: member states enjoy nuclear assistance in exchange for agreeing not to seek nuclear weapons. Using a data set of TC projects since 1972, we examine whether international nuclear assistance is associated with the pursuit of nuclear weapons. We hypothesize that some TC assistance reduces the cost of pursuing nuclear weapons, making weapons programs more likely. We find that receiving TC related to the nuclear fuel cycle is a statistically and substantively significant factor in state decisions since 1972 to seek nuclear weapons, with important implications for existing theories of nuclear proliferation. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1177/0022002713509052 |
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source | Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Jstor Complete Legacy; SAGE Journals Online |
subjects | Agreements Arms control & disarmament Bilateralism Conflict resolution Cooperation Cost reduction Datasets Decision analysis IAEA International Cooperation International organizations Nuclear Energy Nuclear Fuels Nuclear nonproliferation Nuclear power Nuclear Proliferation Nuclear tests Nuclear Weapons Studies Uranium Weapons Weapons development |
title | Talking Peace, Making Weapons: IAEA Technical Cooperation and Nuclear Proliferation |
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