EPISODE · Sep 19, 2024 · 58 MIN
Arms Control in the Modern Era — Andrew Reddie
from The IR thinker
This episode of The IR thinker traces the evolution of arms control from its Cold War origins to today’s challenges of governing rapidly advancing weapons technologies, in conversation with Dr Andrew Reddie. The discussion examines what makes arms control treaties work in practice, how non state actors and rising powers shape regimes, the implications of cases such as New START and the INF Treaty, and emerging ideas for regulating new nuclear and high tech weapons.Andrew ReddieDr Andrew Reddie is Associate Research Professor at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley, and Founder of the Berkeley Risk and Security Lab. His research sits at the intersection of technology, politics and security, focusing on how innovations in nuclear weapons, cybersecurity and artificial intelligence are reshaping international order and the governance of strategic weapons.Publications:Economic Statecraft in the 21st Century: Implications for the Future of the Global Trade RegimeEvidence of the unthinkable: Experimental wargaming at the nuclear thresholdArms Control Workshop: Summary19 Sanctions in an Era of Strategic Competition Get access ArrowContent00:00 - Introduction02:16 - Evolution of Arms Control: From the Cold War to Technological Governance05:32 - Weapons Under Current Arms Control Regimes07:30 - Key Factors in Successful Treaty Implementation and Contemporary Challenges11:09 - The Impact of Non-State Actors and Non-Superpowers on Arms Control14:46 - Global Oversight and Supervision of Arms Control Regimes17:23 - Verification Processes in Arms Control19:52 - Identifying Loopholes in the Verification Processes24:01 - The Implications of New START and INF Treaties on Modern Arms Control27:44 - Contemporary Fears of a Renewed Arms Race32:14 - The Unique Case of the USA as the Only User of Nuclear Weapons33:05 - Enriched Uranium Weapons: A Closer Look34:50 - China’s Approach to Arms Control37:21 - Sino-Russian Consultations on Arms Control38:38 - India and Pakistan: Approaches to Arms Control39:13 - Iran and Israel: Divergent Approaches to Arms Control41:07 - The United Kingdom and France’s Role in Arms Control42:51 - Potential New Nuclear Weapon States: Candidates and Risks47:39 - Innovative Approaches and Ideas for Strengthening Arms Control50:03 - Incentives for States to Abandon Nuclear Weapons51:15 - Governance of Nuclear Weapons: Current Frameworks and Future Directions53:54 - Emerging Weapon Technologies and the Need for New Arms Control Regimes56:31 - Prospective Areas for Future Research in Arms ControlFollow & Further ResourcesSubstack: https://theirthinker.substack.com/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/ir-thinker/X: https://x.com/irthinker_Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theirthinker/Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/theirthinker.bsky.socialFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/irthinkerfb Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
What this episode covers
This episode of The IR thinker traces the evolution of arms control from its Cold War origins to today’s challenges of governing rapidly advancing weapons technologies, in conversation with Dr Andrew Reddie. The discussion examines what makes arms control treaties work in practice, how non state actors and rising powers shape regimes, the implications of cases such as New START and the INF Treaty, and emerging ideas for regulating new nuclear and high tech weapons.Andrew ReddieDr Andrew Reddie is Associate Research Professor at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley, and Founder of the Berkeley Risk and Security Lab. His research sits at the intersection of technology, politics and security, focusing on how innovations in nuclear weapons, cybersecurity and artificial intelligence are reshaping international order and the governance of strategic weapons.Publications:Economic Statecraft in the 21st Century: Implications for the Future of the Global Trade RegimeEvidence of the unthinkable: Experimental wargaming at the nuclear thresholdArms Control Workshop: Summary19 Sanctions in an Era of Strategic Competition Get access ArrowContent00:00 - Introduction02:16 - Evolution of Arms Control: From the Cold War to Technological Governance05:32 - Weapons Under Current Arms Control Regimes07:30 - Key Factors in Successful Treaty Implementation and Contemporary Challenges11:09 - The Impact of Non-State Actors and Non-Superpowers on Arms Control14:46 - Global Oversight and Supervision of Arms Control Regimes17:23 - Verification Processes in Arms Control19:52 - Identifying Loopholes in the Verification Processes24:01 - The Implications of New START and INF Treaties on Modern Arms Control27:44 - Contemporary Fears of a Renewed Arms Race32:14 - The Unique Case of the USA as the Only User of Nuclear Weapons33:05 - Enriched Uranium Weapons: A Closer Look34:50 - China’s Approach to Arms Control37:21 - Sino-Russian Consultations on Arms Control38:38 - India and Pakistan: Approaches to Arms Control39:13 - Iran and Israel: Divergent Approaches to Arms Control41:07 - The United Kingdom and France’s Role in Arms Control42:51 - Potential New Nuclear Weapon States: Candidates and Risks47:39 - Innovative Approaches and Ideas for Strengthening Arms Control50:03 - Incentives for States to Abandon Nuclear Weapons51:15 - Governance of Nuclear Weapons: Current Frameworks and Future Directions53:54 - Emerging Weapon Technologies and the Need for New Arms Control Regimes56:31 - Prospective Areas for Future Research in Arms ControlFollow & Further ResourcesSubstack: https://theirthinker.substack.com/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/ir-thinker/X: https://x.com/irthinker_Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theirthinker/Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/theirthinker.bsky.socialFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/irthinkerfb Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Arms Control in the Modern Era — Andrew Reddie
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