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Why Nuclear Weapons May Not Help to Keep the Peace
Paperback

Why Nuclear Weapons May Not Help to Keep the Peace

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Essay from the year 2013 in the subject Politics - International Politics - General and Theories, grade: 73/100, University of Leicester, language: English, abstract: Nuclear weapons undeniably constituted a powerful deterrent against the renewed outbreak of major international conflict in the past seven decades, yet it would be wrong to infer from that reality that they might consequently always serve as an unfailing source of peace, stability and mutual security. Supposing them capable of doing so by mere virtue of their destructive potential and/or presumed stabilizing powers is essentially to discount that whatever agency they may have for underwriting peace and stability ultimately does not issue from their physical presence alone, but rather from the distinct set of international arrangements and conditions under which they actually exist. Any major change in the basic fabric of that order likely stands to not only sharply decrease their capacity at deterrence, but may likewise turn them into a dangerous mechanism for undermining the very ‘nuclear peace’ which some neo-realists erroneously credit these armaments capable of maintaining irrespective of the historical circumstances surrounding them.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Grin Publishing
Date
27 November 2014
Pages
40
ISBN
9783656844914

Essay from the year 2013 in the subject Politics - International Politics - General and Theories, grade: 73/100, University of Leicester, language: English, abstract: Nuclear weapons undeniably constituted a powerful deterrent against the renewed outbreak of major international conflict in the past seven decades, yet it would be wrong to infer from that reality that they might consequently always serve as an unfailing source of peace, stability and mutual security. Supposing them capable of doing so by mere virtue of their destructive potential and/or presumed stabilizing powers is essentially to discount that whatever agency they may have for underwriting peace and stability ultimately does not issue from their physical presence alone, but rather from the distinct set of international arrangements and conditions under which they actually exist. Any major change in the basic fabric of that order likely stands to not only sharply decrease their capacity at deterrence, but may likewise turn them into a dangerous mechanism for undermining the very ‘nuclear peace’ which some neo-realists erroneously credit these armaments capable of maintaining irrespective of the historical circumstances surrounding them.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Grin Publishing
Date
27 November 2014
Pages
40
ISBN
9783656844914