This article demonstrates the centrality of mentality, culture, beliefs and historical lessons for nuclear prolifertion. Using the historical casestudies of Britain, France, and West Germany, it encourages researchers to look at the mentality/culture of potential proliferators rather than apply a culture-less "Realist" IR theory approach that assumes that desicion-makers the world over think like Bismarck
23 pagesCultural Cognition refers to the disposition to conform one's beliefs about societal risks t...
This article compares the ways in which Cold War culture in general and ‘nuclear culture’ in particu...
Cultural Cognition refers to the disposition to conform one\u27s beliefs about societal risks to one...
This is volume II of my two-volume study of the nuclear strategies/strategy preferences of Britain, ...
This is volume II of my two-volume study of the nuclear strategies/strategy preferences of Britain, ...
Part One of this article, which appeared in the last edition of Diplomacy and Statecraft, argued tha...
Based on a detailed analysis of archives and high level interviews this book looks at the role of be...
One of the key questions in contemporary Strategic Studies and Non-Proliferation Studies focuses on ...
One of the key questions in contemporary Strategic Studies and Non-Proliferation Studies focuses on ...
This article explores British 'nuclear culture' by examining how individuals and groups within Briti...
This book has two major objectives. First, it sets out to chart in detail the British experience wit...
The article proposes an analysis of atomic culture in the United States and Western Europe, during ...
This article analyses the social bases underpinning the widely different trajectories of nuclear ene...
This two‐part article examines the threat of nuclear weapons and the promise of human rights in term...
Johnston argues that the preemptive first-use of nuclear weapons, long the foundation of American nu...
23 pagesCultural Cognition refers to the disposition to conform one's beliefs about societal risks t...
This article compares the ways in which Cold War culture in general and ‘nuclear culture’ in particu...
Cultural Cognition refers to the disposition to conform one\u27s beliefs about societal risks to one...
This is volume II of my two-volume study of the nuclear strategies/strategy preferences of Britain, ...
This is volume II of my two-volume study of the nuclear strategies/strategy preferences of Britain, ...
Part One of this article, which appeared in the last edition of Diplomacy and Statecraft, argued tha...
Based on a detailed analysis of archives and high level interviews this book looks at the role of be...
One of the key questions in contemporary Strategic Studies and Non-Proliferation Studies focuses on ...
One of the key questions in contemporary Strategic Studies and Non-Proliferation Studies focuses on ...
This article explores British 'nuclear culture' by examining how individuals and groups within Briti...
This book has two major objectives. First, it sets out to chart in detail the British experience wit...
The article proposes an analysis of atomic culture in the United States and Western Europe, during ...
This article analyses the social bases underpinning the widely different trajectories of nuclear ene...
This two‐part article examines the threat of nuclear weapons and the promise of human rights in term...
Johnston argues that the preemptive first-use of nuclear weapons, long the foundation of American nu...
23 pagesCultural Cognition refers to the disposition to conform one's beliefs about societal risks t...
This article compares the ways in which Cold War culture in general and ‘nuclear culture’ in particu...
Cultural Cognition refers to the disposition to conform one\u27s beliefs about societal risks to one...