Stepping Back: Nuclear Arms Control and the End of the Cold War
By (Author) William B. Vogele
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th April 1994
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Nuclear weapons
History: specific events and topics
327.174
Hardback
184
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
510g
Vogele provides a contemporary history of the nuclear arms control negotiations of the 1980s, tracing these negotiations from their initiation at the beginning of the decade through the agreements that were reached by the end. Two chapters provide background on arms control efforts from the mid-1950s through 1980. The work is an analytical history of nuclear arms control bargaining processes, and an evaluation of the utility of alternative negotiation strategies for producing agreement. Thus, the history of these negotiations offers lessons for the continuing pursuit of arms control and other cooperative security arrangement in the post-Cold War international order.
.,."offers a useful examination of the bilateral US-Soviet nuclear arms control negotiations from 1954 to the early days of the Clinton administration. This book should be of interest to those readers who look for a concise but authoritative review of nuclear arms control negotiations, and those with an interest in bargaining strategies."-The Colgate Scene
...offers a useful examination of the bilateral US-Soviet nuclear arms control negotiations from 1954 to the early days of the Clinton administration. This book should be of interest to those readers who look for a concise but authoritative review of nuclear arms control negotiations, and those with an interest in bargaining strategies.-The Colgate Scene
..."offers a useful examination of the bilateral US-Soviet nuclear arms control negotiations from 1954 to the early days of the Clinton administration. This book should be of interest to those readers who look for a concise but authoritative review of nuclear arms control negotiations, and those with an interest in bargaining strategies."-The Colgate Scene
WILLIAM B. VOGELE is presently associated with the Center for International Affairs at Harvard University, and is Special Assistant to the President at the Albert Einstein Institution. He has been a fellow with the Program on Nonviolent Sanctions at the Center for International Affairs at Harvard, Adjunct Assistant Professor at the Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Visiting Assistant Professor at Clark University, and Visiting Lecturer at the University of New Hampshire. Dr. Vogele is presently interested in analysis of alternative and cooperative security strategies, and the development of empirical research protocols for the evaluation of social powers that are relevant to these strategies.