Available Formats
Challenging Nuclearism: A Humanitarian Approach to Reshape the Global Nuclear Order
By (Author) Marianne Hanson
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
1st February 2025
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Public international law: humanitarian law
International relations
327.1747
Paperback
283
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 15mm
400g
Challenging nuclearism explores how a deliberate 'normalisation' of nuclear weapons has been constructed, why it has prevailed in international politics for over seventy years and why it is only now being questioned seriously. The book identifies how certain practices have enabled a small group of states to hold vast arsenals of these weapons of mass destruction and how the close control over nuclear decisions by a select group has meant that the humanitarian consequences of nuclear weapons have been disregarded for decades.
The recent UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons will not bring about quick disarmament. It has been decried by the nuclear weapon states. But by rejecting nuclearism and providing a clear denunciation of nuclear weapons, it will challenge nuclear states in a way that has until now not been possible. Challenging nuclearism analyses the origins and repercussions of this pivotal moment in nuclear politics.
'As tensions rise, the existential threat of nuclear weapons becomes prominent once again and the world needs more critical assessments of what is beingand what could bedone to avoid the catastrophe of nuclear war or accident. Hansons book therefore provides a vital contribution that clearly sets out the case for why we need to reject nuclearism and make a world without nuclear weapons a reality.'
Rhys Crilley, International Affairs
'Australian political scientist Marianne Hanson has written a clear-eyed book about the prospects for nuclear disarmament. Hanson soberly concludes that the nuclear-armed states, left to control the terms, the pace and the outcome of an endeavour to which they have pledged themselves for decades, will never give up nuclear weapons. Nevertheless, a path forward to the elimination of nuclear weapons exists, and Hanson describes that path and the challenges along the way.'
John Loretz, Medicine, Conflict and Survival
Marianne Hanson is Associate Professor of International Relations at the School of Political Science and International Studies, University of Queensland.