1. Evolution and Resilience of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Regime.
- Author
-
Pregenzer, Arian L.
- Subjects
- *
NUCLEAR nonproliferation , *ORGANIZATIONAL resilience , *ORGANIZATIONAL change , *DIVERSITY in organizations , *NUCLEAR weapons ,TREATY on the Non-proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (1968) - Abstract
This paper introduces the concept of systems resilience as a new framework for thinking about the future of the nonproliferation regime. Resilience refers to the ability of a system to maintain its vital functions in the face of continuous and unpredictable change. First, I make the case that the nonproliferation regime can be viewed as a complex system. Next, I discuss key themes from the literature on systems resilience and apply them to the nonproliferation system: the difference between resilience and stability; the need for evolution to maintain function; the importance of functional diversity; and the concept of the adaptive cycle. I show that most existing nonproliferation strategies are aimed at stability rather than resilience and that the current nonproliferation system may be over-constrained by the cumulative evolution of strategies. According to the literature on systems resilience, this increases its vulnerability to collapse. I argue that the resilience of the nonproliferation system can be enhanced by increasing international participation in setting the nonproliferation agenda, developing general international response capabilities, focusing on non-coercive approaches to decreasing demand, and applying systems thinking more rigorously to nonproliferation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF