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The 2005 NPT Review Conference: Mission Impossible?

The 2005 NPT Review Conference: Mission Impossible?
The 2005 NPT Review Conference: Mission Impossible?
The 2005 Review Conference of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) failed to produce any agreed action plan for addressing nuclear disarmament or proliferation. Detailed discussions and negotiations on such a plan were much curtailed because of procedural wrangles. This article describes the evolution of the conference and argues that changes in the international political environment and problems inherent in the revised NPT review process agreed at its 1995 Extension Conference contributed to the meager outcome. The main issues raised by delegations in their plenary statements, working papers, and the limited time available for interactive discussion are summarized, and three perspectives are offered on the reasons for the lack of any substantive product. Finally, the implications of that failure for the NPT, its review process, the wider regime for international nuclear governance, and nuclear disarmament, nuclear nonproliferation, and the peaceful use of nuclear energy are examined.
nuclear nonproliferation, NPT review process, 2005 NPT review conference, nuclear disarmament
1073-6700
1-23
Simpson, John
d2e46e13-6100-4f62-b93e-467425ff1a81
Nielsen, Jenny
2217f66d-c697-44c4-b1f9-c0058991122a
Simpson, John
d2e46e13-6100-4f62-b93e-467425ff1a81
Nielsen, Jenny
2217f66d-c697-44c4-b1f9-c0058991122a

Simpson, John and Nielsen, Jenny (2005) The 2005 NPT Review Conference: Mission Impossible? The Nonproliferation Review, 12 (2), 1-23. (doi:10.1080/10736700500378901).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The 2005 Review Conference of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) failed to produce any agreed action plan for addressing nuclear disarmament or proliferation. Detailed discussions and negotiations on such a plan were much curtailed because of procedural wrangles. This article describes the evolution of the conference and argues that changes in the international political environment and problems inherent in the revised NPT review process agreed at its 1995 Extension Conference contributed to the meager outcome. The main issues raised by delegations in their plenary statements, working papers, and the limited time available for interactive discussion are summarized, and three perspectives are offered on the reasons for the lack of any substantive product. Finally, the implications of that failure for the NPT, its review process, the wider regime for international nuclear governance, and nuclear disarmament, nuclear nonproliferation, and the peaceful use of nuclear energy are examined.

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More information

Published date: July 2005
Keywords: nuclear nonproliferation, NPT review process, 2005 NPT review conference, nuclear disarmament

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 35289
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/35289
ISSN: 1073-6700
PURE UUID: 9c657018-e4ad-44ee-9765-ce9b0b0a4308

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Date deposited: 17 May 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:51

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Contributors

Author: John Simpson
Author: Jenny Nielsen

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