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A adesão do Brasil ao TNP : uma análise da trajetória da questão nuclear brasileira nos governos de Fernando Collor de Mello (1990-92) e Fernando Henrique Cardoso (1995-98) /Oliveira, Leonardo Soares de. January 2011 (has links)
Orientador: Samuel Alves Soares / Banca: Vagner Camilo Alves / Banca: Eduardo Mei / Resumo: Neste trabalho, analisa-se o processo da adesão do Brasil ao Tratado de Não-Proliferação de Armas Nucleares (TNP) a partir de uma abordagem em três níveis analíticos (individual, doméstico e internacional) sobre a trajetória da questão nuclear brasileira nos anos 1990, enfocando os governos de Fernando Collor de Mello (1990-92) e Fernando Henrique Cardoso (1995-98). A principal questão do estudo é desvelar as razões pelas quais houve a subscrição brasileira do TNP. Em busca de respostas para a problemática, o desenvolvimento da análise, contudo, leva a perspectiva a extrapolar os fatos referentes unicamente à questão nuclear para, então, compreender a relação existente entre a assinatura do TNP pelo País, assim como de outros acordos prevendo o compromisso nacional com a não-proliferação de armas nucleares, das outras ADM e dos vetores (mísseis balísticos), com o projeto de país pensado pelas novas lideranças políticas brasileiras, o projeto de "potência pacífica", que previa a renúncia do País ao fortalecimento dos seus atributos de ordem estratégico-militar e estabelecia o recurso ao softpower como a ferramenta para a inserção internacional brasileira nos anos 1990 / Abstract: This work analyses the process of Brazilian adherence on the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) under the approaching in three main analytical levels (individual, subregional, international) on the path of Brazilian nuclear question in the 1990s, focusing on Fernando Collor de Mello (1990-92) and Fernando Henrique Cardoso's government (1995-98). The main goal is to reveal the reasons by which there was the signature on NPT. Searching answers for that, the analysis, although, leads the perspective to see beyond the nuclear question to comprehend the relation between Brazilian signature on NPT, as others agreements defining Brazilian commitment on the non-proliferation principle, including all of WMD and ballistic missile, with the national project thought by new political leaderships, called "peaceful power", which established Brazilian renouncement on the development of is strategic attributes and the election of soft-power as the mean to Brazilian international insertion in the 1990's / Mestre
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Roky velkého snění: čínský jaderný vzestup a strategická stabilita velké síly / Years of Dreaming Big: Chinese Nuclear Rise and Great Power Strategic StabilityNikolić, Luka January 2020 (has links)
Great powers have almost exclusively decided the destiny of international relations. The birth, life, and death of an order have been regulated by those actors with the largest military, strategic, economic, and other capabilities. Conceptually building upon the premises of structural realism, the thesis claims that the Chinese nuclear rise is the decisive factor for the disappearance of the incumbent international system and the consequent rise of the new one, labeled as asymmetric triangular nuclear competition. This critically affects the notion of strategic stability, adjusting its characteristics for a different strategic environment. The research has twofold relevance. First, in the academic sense, it deepens a scantly treated debate on the interconnection between the management of nuclear weapons arsenal and the overall outlook of the international system. Second, in the practical sense, the study of the behavior of great powers provides an excellent foundation for policy analysis. The aforementioned is achieved in the three stages. In the beginning, the Chinese nuclear rise is considered as a set of comprehensive reforms in terms of weapons systems, military apparatus, but also doctrines and strategic concepts. After that, the nuclear rise is put in the context of Chinese silent moves from...
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Nuclear Eventuality: How the Nuclear Bomb Contaminated the Present with the FutureJungkyu Suh (10680960) 07 May 2021 (has links)
<p>This project argues that the nuclear bomb has made speculation an integral part of representing the material world. The bomb’s capability to cause an unprecedented extent of destruction and the constant state of latent war between nuclear-armed countries (expressed through arms race and high alert readiness) created a reality where the disasters in the future must be constantly speculated to understand the contemporary world’s material state. The tens of thousands of nuclear warheads sleeping in silos and submarines are not just the sum of their material components, but also incredibly compressed embodiments of future disasters that may be released at a moment’s notice. Regardless of the likelihood of nuclear conflicts (with which this dissertation is not concerned), the weapon exerts its influence as one of the most catastrophic possibilities even as it remains dormant. In considering the implications of nuclear weapons, all nations and people on the planet think not of what they are, but what they can do. The weapon’s possible future states define its present significance.</p><p> The inherent oxymoron of the nuclear bomb is thus that despite its staggering materiality, it is fiction as well. Any representation of the bomb that ponders its sole purpose—mass destruction—is inevitably speculative. While the degrees in which they reference empirical data vary, the narratives from which people around the world from heads of nations to common citizens learn anything at all about nuclear weaponry are forms of fiction, ranging from fantastical literary fictions to strategic fictions attempting to represent the power of the weapon that is itself fantastical. Not all representations of the weapon or nuclear war are, of course, taken seriously. Apocalyptic nuclear events are often used in popular nuclear fictions as a convenient excuse for dismantling the existing social structures and providing interesting backdrops for survivalist stories. The very fact that imaginations of hypothetical nuclear disasters have become an overused cliché all the while proliferation remains an active threat, however, also indicates that the world has been living with the horrifying prospect of nuclear disasters for decades without an actual event of the kind—that, in other words, the weapon has existed mostly as a fiction. The introduction of the nuclear bomb to the world in this sense marks a critical point in history beyond which the speculated future outcomes of the productions in the present increasingly becomes an integral part of understanding the latter.</p><p>The central concept with which I articulate the relationship between the present and the future created by nuclear weaponry is “eventuality.” Eventuality is a narrativization process through which a historical event develops into an anticipated future event as the original event’s outcome. A story about a fictional World War III involving nuclear weapons, for example, is a form of eventuality. The conceptual usefulness of eventuality is that it articulates the historical trend in the post-1945 era as well as the more recent years of climate change, in which hypothetical future events are increasingly represented not just for the purpose of knowing the future itself, but also reassessing the history to date. Eventuality establishes a causal relation between an event and its hypothetical future outcome—or its “eventual” as I call it. By drawing a line of synthetic history extending beyond the present, eventuality as a narrativization process defines the direction in which history has been heading up to the present. Compared to the postmodernist understanding of the representation of the past, eventuality is concerned with how human productions in the present already creates the future and, consequently, how the very ways in which we conceive the present is influenced by the possible futures.</p><p>To discuss the concept of eventuality in detail, the first chapter examines time travel narratives as ideal instances of eventuality. Eventuality consists in two operations running in opposite temporal directions—speculatively writing the future (prospection) and assessing history in light of that speculated future (retrospection). The literary genre that embodies this exact pair of movements is the time travel narrative. H. G. Wells’s novel <i>The Time Machine </i>(1895), the first scientific time travel story, creates a critical legacy for the genre: the assumption that the entirety of time already exists. The conceptualization of the already-existing future is important because it emphasizes the causal relation between the present and the future—the future which the time traveler witnesses is the direct outcome of his present. In the movie adaptation produced during the Cold War, the dystopian course of history is rewritten to be a nuclear war narrative, which suggests that the time travel narrative as a base frame has been appropriated by the desire to speculate the future born with the nuclear bomb. Then decades later the <i>Terminator </i>movies develop the time travel narrative as an instance of eventuality even further by creating a scenario in which the future is no longer just an uncharted territory to be explored, but an active force that has a direct sway over the present’s world. </p><p>Along with literary fictions of nuclear disasters, strategic studies on nuclear conflicts also attempt to represent the nonexistent events of future disasters. The historical significance of the advent of wargaming, a major form of nuclear strategic fiction, is that even the comparatively scientific and empirical study of nuclear war funded by the U.S. military is fundamentally speculative. The very formation and development of wargaming, in other words, is an indication that the nuclear weapon brings with it unknown possibilities for the future. The legitimacy of a wargame’s findings is dependent on that of the future projection used in the scenario. But since the latter is itself speculative and thus cannot be proven, the narrative logic of a wargame is circular or self-referential. This circularity is exactly the structure of the synthetic history in the <i>Terminator </i>films, which is a form of eventuality in which the present creates the future and the future retrospectively redefines the present.</p><p>The nuclear bomb, finally, also contributed to the advent of ecological worldview with its ecocidal nature and sheer extent of destructive capability. Geosciences in the U.S. experienced a rapid growth following the second World War, as the military pursued global surveillance for nuclear activities. Some of the same scientists who developed the weapons also began to study the interactions between radiation and the human body, as the workers in the weapons production lines began to experience radiation sickness. This kind of research was soon expanded to the study of radiation’s ecological effects on a broader scale involving not just the human bodies but also other environmental entities, organic and inorganic. Civilian research projects, in the meantime, found a widespread impact of weapons tests, including the “bone seeker” radioisotopes accumulated in the human body. Lastly, in terms of the more general way of understanding the world, the cases of radiation exposures discovered far away from the sources offered people around the world points of reference with which they could conceive an ecologically interconnected network on a planetary scale. </p>
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Role jaderných zbraní v regionálním konfliktu mezi Indií a Pákistánem / The Role of Nuclear Weapons in Regional Conflict Between India and PakistanPolášková, Kamila January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Americko-indické vztahy na konci 60. a v první polovině 70. let 20. století / India-U.S. Relations in the Late 1960s and in the First Half of the 1970sNovotný, Ondřej January 2015 (has links)
This MA thesis titled as - India-U.S. Relations in the Late 1960s and in the First Half of the 1970s - focuses on mutual relations of the U.S. on one side and India on the other. It elaborates various events, which influenced these relations during the late 1960s and in the first half ot the 1970s. The result of this work is the confirmation that the U.S., in its foreign policy strategy, strictly followed the principle of realpolitik. Thanks to that their interests, however, often collided with those of India. Its effort of rapprochment with the PRC, during which Pakistan played an important role as the main communication channel between both countries, was a 'thorn in the side' of India's top officials, including its Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. The U.S. foreign policy, which was mainly in hands of the National Security Advisor of President Richard Nixon Henry Kissinger, had to logically prefer an alliance with Pakistan. This, of course, was not welcomed by India because these two Asian countries waged several wars against each other and had strained relations since their birth. Thus, in spite of the fact that India might seem as the best American partner, given its strong democratic principles, the opposite was true. Nixon/Kissinger, in defiance of all obstacles, did not relent and remained firm...
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Sociální konstrukce jaderné hrozby : nukleární odzbrojovací diskurz USA mezi lety 1945 a 2014 / The social construction of nuclear threat : US nuclear disarmament discourse, 1945-2014Pyrihová, Marie January 2015 (has links)
Nuclear weapons are the key element of the security policy of the United States of America since 1945. Since then, nuclear weapons and related nuclear threats were part of a social discourse of the United States. This thesis examined how these threats were socially constructed within the discourse by individual actors. Then, by discoursive analysis, the thesis investigated how the nuclear disarmament discourse responded to these identified threats. The study focused on how these identified threats and the nuclear disarmament discourse influenced each other in each period and how they impacted following periods. This diploma thesis examined the U.S. nuclear discourse while using a methodological framework of discoursive analysis. The diploma thesis operated with the theory of securitization and determined key moments, when particular threat was designated as existential to the security of the United States and when, eventually, this threat subsided.
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Is Triple Coincidence a Viable Method for Nuclear Weapons Detection in Light of Double Coincidence Methods?Herlin, Karl January 2021 (has links)
A fully functioning Comprehensive nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) is essential for a world free of nuclear weapons. To measure radionuclides in the atmosphere in accordance with the CTBT, facilities such as SAUNA uses double coincidence techniques to discriminate between interesting Xenon isotopes. In this paper, a Monte-Carlo code (open source) based on first principles simulating a radionuclide detector has been built to investigate the viability of triple coincidence methods for measurements of $^{131m}$Xe, $^{133m}$Xe, $^{133}$Xe and $^{135}$Xe and found that by measuring $\beta - $ Ce $-$ X-ray coincides in $^{133}$Xe and $^{135}$Xe one could seperate the 30 keV photon energy region of interest by as much as $42.9 \pm 26.8$ keV and $214 \pm 50.8$ keV away from the original electron $-$ photon energy axes measured in SAUNA, using concentrations of Xenon isotopes typical for a nuclear weapons test one day after testing. The conclusion is that triple coincidence is a viable method for nuclear weapons detection in light of double coincidence methods, if only considering this theoretical approach. No conclusions on the practicality of triple coincidence methods in a CTBT could be drawn from these results.
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The United States security policy in the tripolar nuclear power system : how China's attainment of mutual assured destruction (MAD) capability would affect the U.S. security policy.Tagaya, Maki 01 January 1989 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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U.S. foreign policy and Israeli nuclear weapons, 1957-1982.Galligan, John L. 01 January 1990 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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The role of Highly Enriched Uranium in South Africa’s nuclear diplomacyKrelekrele, Thembela January 2021 (has links)
Masters of Commerce / Highly enriched uranium (HEU) is one of the most dangerous materials in the world, because it is a key ingredient in making a nuclear bomb. If a terrorist organisation can get HEU, it would be close to making a nuclear bomb. After South Africa disarmed its nuclear weapons, it kept HEU that was extracted from the nuclear bombs. The US tried to persuade South Africa to blend down its HEU into low enriched uranium (LEU) or give it up for safekeeping. However, South Africa refused to give it up. After a breach at Pelindaba, a national key point facility where South Africa stores its HEU, the US intensified its efforts to pressure South Africa to give its HEU up. It even promised incentives to South Africa should they agree to give it up, but South Africa refused. The US used the nuclear terrorism narrative to justify its initiative to eliminate vulnerable materials in the world. However, South Africa is yet to be swayed. This is odd since South Africa's refusal can negatively affect its credentials as a nuclear non-proliferation and disarmament champion and its image as a norm entrepreneur. The objective of the study was to understand the role played by HEU in South Africa's nuclear diplomacy. It was to explore HEU as a factor in the state's nuclear diplomacy and to understand the power of having HEU in nuclear negotiations, as well as what SA intends to do with its HEU. The study is framed theoretically by drawing on foreign policy theory, namely middle-power theory, and revisionism. It juxtaposed middle power, reformist, and revisionist positions with status quo foreign policy to analyse the role of HEU in South Africa's nuclear diplomacy. As a middle power with a moral high ground, South Africa hoped that it can affect change in the nuclear regime. However, when this did not occur its foreign policy shifted to a revisionist character that is discontent with the status quo in the nuclear regime. SA is dissatisfied with the current nuclear order and wants it revised towards liberal values such as equality and non-discrimination. It views the current nuclear order as nuclear apartheid. Therefore, South Africa uses HEU as leverage against nuclear weapon states in nuclear diplomacy. It is using HEU as an act of defiance against nuclear weapon states (such as the US) that are yet to disarm their nuclear weapons.
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