7 janvier 2025

OUVRAGE : K. Egeland, The Struggle for Abolition: Power and Legitimacy in Multilateral Nuclear Disarmament Diplomacy

Kjølv EGELAND

Can the genie be returned to the bottle? This book investigates the pursuit by states, civil society groups, and international organisations of nuclear abolition. Detailing the evolution of the institutional architecture for multilateral nuclear disarmament from the 1960s onwards, this book tells a story of high hopes, broken promises, and clashing views of history, security, and the future.

Global nuclear politics deals in material power and security but is also shot through with contests over prestige, justice, and mutual recognition. Waves of innovation in multilateral nuclear disarmament diplomacy have typically come about on the back of crises of legitimacy within the broader nuclear order.

The book concludes with a discussion of policy implications and a reflection on successes and failures in the history of multilateral nuclear disarmament. The volume will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of diplomacy, history, and politics and international relations.


TABLE OF CONTENTS

Acknowledgements
Abbreviations and Acronyms

Introduction: Multilateral Nuclear Disarmament and International Order

1. Nuclear Order and the Struggle for Recognition 
2. Democratisation and Discord, 1969-1978 
3. Renewing the Bargain, 1979-2000 
4. The Road to Prohibition, 2001-2021

Findings and Implications
Index


Kjølv EGELAND, The Struggle for Abolition: Power and Legitimacy in Multilateral Nuclear Disarmament Diplomacy, Abingdon, Routledge, 2025 (222 pp.)


Kjølv Egeland is a postdoctoral fellow with the Nuclear Knowledges Programme at the Center for International Studies (CERI) at Sciences Po in Paris. Completing his doctorate in International Relations at the University of Oxford in 2018, his research interests centre on international security, ideology, and multilateral diplomacy. Egeland’s work on nuclear arms control and disarmament has appeared in a range of leading social science journals. His article ‘A Theory of Nuclear Disarmament’ was awarded the Bernard Brodie Prize in 2022.

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