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2019 Projects, Publications, and Meetings of the Ƶ

Global Security and International Affairs

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The Global Security and International Affairs program area draws on the expertise of policy-makers, practitioners, and scholars to foster knowledge and inform innovative and more sustainable policies to address crucial issues affecting a global community. Projects underway in this area engage with pressing strategic, development, and moral questions that underpin relations among people, communities, and states worldwide. Each initiative embraces a broad conception of security as the interaction among human, national, and global security imperatives. Project recommendations move beyond the idea of security as the absence of war toward higher aspirations of collective peace, development, and justice.

 

Committee on International Security Studies

CHAIR

Scott D. Sagan
Stanford University



MEMBERS

Nicholas Burns
Harvard University


Antonia Chayes
Tufts University


Christopher Chyba
Princeton University


Karl Eikenberry
Stanford University


Tanisha Fazal
University of Minnesota


Martha Finnemore
George Washington University


Robert Legvold
Columbia University


Rose McDermott
Brown University


Steven E. Miller
Harvard University


Barry Posen
Massachusetts Institute of Technology


Adam Roberts
University of Oxford


Kathryn Sikkink
Harvard University


Paul Wise
Stanford University

 


 

Project

Meeting the Challenges of the New Nuclear Age, Phase One

The global nuclear order is evolving today along three main dimensions: 1) the nuclear posture of several nuclear weapons states has changed because of the possible use of nuclear weapons in war fighting; 2) technological innovations (in the space and cyber realm in particular, although not exclusively) are impacting existing nuclear arrangements (including the extended deterrence architecture and strategic stability); and 3) the changes in the current global nuclear order affect the prospects for nuclear arms control in a multipolar world.

Phase one of the project will identify the major dangers generated by the dynamics of a multipolar nuclear world–dangers that pose the greatest threat of inadvertent nuclear war; offer alternative approaches to addressing each of these dangers and then facilitate discussions with relevant communities in the United States and abroad; and encourage and assist policy-makers, Congress, the analytical community, and the media to think systematically about a world that is now multipolar. The project has published three research papers that have been shared with diverse audiences, such as domestic and international policy-makers, scholars and students of nuclear affairs, and leaders of international organizations. In Spring 2020, the project will publish an issue of æ岹ܲ, which will be accompanied by an outreach strategy targeting relevant policy-makers and academics.

Meeting the Challenges of the New Nuclear Age is rooted in the critically important work on arms control that the Ƶ conducted from 1958 to 1960 to prevent a nuclear confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union. During that time Ƶ Fellows gathered monthly to build a cooperative framework between the United States and the Soviet Union based on the limitations of the nuclear stockpile and the establishment of mutual vulnerability between the two rivals. The group included Donald Brennan, Edward Teller, Henry Kissinger, and Thomas Schelling, among others.

PROJECT CHAIRS

Robert Legvold
Columbia University


Christopher Chyba
Princeton University



STEERING COMMITTEE MEMBERS

Thomas J. Christensen
Princeton University


Lynn Eden
Stanford University


Steven E. Miller
Harvard Kennedy School


Janne Nolan
George Washington University


Scott D. Sagan
Stanford University


Jon Wolfsthal
Nuclear Crisis Group



WORKING GROUP MEMBERS

James M. Acton
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace


Mark Bell
University of Minnesota


Linton Brooks
Center for Strategic and International Studies; formerly, U.S. Department of Energy and U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration


M. Taylor Fravel
Massachusetts Institute of Technology


Sumit Ganguly
Indiana University, Bloomington


Francis J. Gavin
Johns Hopkins School of Advanced and International Studies


Michael Krepon
Stimson Center


Hans Kristensen
Federation of American Scientists


Jessica Tuchman Mathews
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace


Nicholas Miller
Dartmouth College


Steven E. Miller
Harvard University


Vipin Narang
Massachusetts Institute of Technology


Janne Nolan
George Washington University


Olga Oliker
International Crisis Group; formerly, Center for Strategic and International Studies


George Perkovich
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace


Steven Pifer
Brookings Institution: formerly, U.S. Department of State


William Potter
James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey


Mira Rapp-Hooper
Yale Law School


Scott D. Sagan
Stanford University


Michael Swaine
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace


Nina Tannenwald
Brown University


Jane Vaynman
Temple University


Keren Yarhi-Milo
Princeton University



PROJECT STAFF

Francesca Giovannini

Kathryn Moffat

Brendan Roach


FUNDERS

Louise Henry Bryson and John E. Bryson

John F. Cogan, Jr.

Lester Crown

Alan M. Dachs

Bob and Kristine Higgins

Richard Rosenberg

Kenneth L. and Susan S. Wallach


† Deceased

 

Project Publications

 

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Meeting the Challenges of the New Nuclear Age: U.S. and Russian Nuclear Concepts, Past and Present
Linton Brooks, Alexei Arbatov, and Francis J. Gavin (American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences, 2018)

Meeting the Challenges of the New Nuclear Age: Emerging Risks and Declining Norms in the Age of Technological Innovation and Changing
Nuclear Doctrines

Nina Tannenwald and James M. Acton, with an Introduction by Jane Vaynman (American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences, 2018)

Meeting the Challenges of the New Nuclear Age: Nuclear Weapons in a Changing Global Order
Steven E. Miller, Robert Legvold, and Lawrence Freedman (American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences, 2019)

 

Project Meetings

 

Strategic Stability Working Group Meeting

October 31–November 1, 2018
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
Washington, D.C.

This meeting brought together a group of scholars and current and former policy-makers to examine whether strategic stability is still relevant and viable in a multipolar nuclear world, and its role in the trilateral relationships between the United States, Russia, and China and India, Pakistan, and China.

MEETING CHAIRS

Robert Legvold
Columbia University


Christopher Chyba
Princeton University

 

æ岹ܲ Authors’ Meeting

February 14–15, 2019
House the Ƶ
Cambridge, MA

Contributors to the æ岹ܲ issue on “Meeting the Challenges of the New Nuclear Age” discussed drafts of their essays and identified key themes in the volume.

MEETING CHAIRS

Robert Legvold
Columbia University


Christopher Chyba
Princeton University

 

æ岹ܲ Authors’ Workshop

June 9–11, 2019
House of the Ƶ
Cambridge, MA

Authors in the æ岹ܲ issue shared feedback on revised versions of their essays and discussed some of the key ideas from the project that will inform the outreach phase of the project.

MEETING CHAIRS

Robert Legvold
Columbia University


Christopher Chyba
Princeton University

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Participants at the æ岹ܲ Authors’ Workshop — front row: Olga Oliker (International Crisis Group), Carmen Wunderlich (Peace Research Institute Frankfurt), James Timbie (Stanford University), Nina Tannenwald (Brown University), Jon Wolfsthal (Nuclear Crisis Group); back row: Robert Legvold (Columbia University), Scott Sagan (Stanford University), Christopher Chyba (Princeton University), Anya Fink (University of Maryland), James Acton (Carnegie Endowment for International Peace), and James Cameron (King’s College London)

 


 

Project

Meeting the Challenges of the New Nuclear Age, Phase Two: Deterrence and New Nuclear States

Phase two of Meeting the Challenges of the New Nuclear Age will produce an edited volume of innovative and policy-relevant essays on challenges created by the emergence of “new” nuclear weapons states such as North Korea, and potential proliferators, such as Iran, Saudi Arabia, Japan, South Korea, and Turkey, among others. The study will also explore other nuclear weapons states, including India, Pakistan, and Israel. These states are de facto nuclear weapons states but operate outside of any established multilateral nuclear frameworks such as the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and the Nuclear Suppliers Group. Deterrence and New Nuclear States would investigate deterrence and defense implications facing small nuclear force-countries and potential proliferators. The study will focus more on regional and sub-regional nuclear dynamics that could further destabilize an already undermined nuclear order.

The edited volume will be published by a university press and will be accompanied by outreach activities aimed at nuclear policy-makers (primarily in the United States) and academic centers and think tank institutes with a specific focus on nuclear studies.

PROJECT CHAIRS

Scott D. Sagan
Stanford University


Vipin Narang
Massachusetts Institute of Technology



ADVISORY COMMITTEE

Victor Cha
Georgetown University


Lawrence Freedman
King’s College London


Robert Jervis
Columbia University


Jeffrey Lewis
Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey


Austin Long
U.S. Department of Defense


Rose McDermott
Brown University


Barry Posen
Massachusetts Institute of Technology


Gary Samore
Brandeis University


Caitlin Talmadge
Georgetown University



PROJECT STAFF

Francesca Giovannini

Kathryn Moffat

Brendan Roach


FUNDERS

Louise Henry Bryson and John E. Bryson

John F. Cogan, Jr.

Lester Crown

Alan M. Dachs

Bob and Kristine Higgins

Richard Rosenberg

Kenneth L. and Susan S. Wallach

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Vipin Narang (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) and Scott Sagan (Stanford University)

 

Project Meetings

 

Deterrence and New Nuclear States Exploratory Meeting

April 24, 2019
House of the Ƶ
Cambridge, MA

Members of the project’s advisory group met to identify some of the key issues concerning deterrence and new nuclear states that will be addressed in the project’s forthcoming edited volume. Topics of discussion included nuclear testing and breakout, strategic stability and credible deterrence, the psychology of deterrence, and nuclear doctrine and international law.

MEETING CHAIRS

Scott D. Sagan
Stanford University


Vipin Narang
Massachusetts Institute of Technology



 KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

Francesca Giovannini
American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences; Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization


Barry Posen
Massachusetts Institute of Technology


Gary Samore
Brandeis University

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Rose McDermott (Brown University) and Francesca Giovannini (American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences; Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization)

 


 

Project

The Global Nuclear Future

The Global Nuclear Future is an interdisciplinary and multinational project that has engaged nuclear newcomers in conversations on nuclear safety, security, and nonproliferation.

The project has focused its work in three main areas: 1) developing regional networks of knowledge in Southeast Asia and the Middle East that could assist nuclear newcomers and nuclear aspirant countries in establishing a safe, secure, and proliferation-resistant program; 2) identifying the best strategies and policies to manage the nuclear fuel cycle, including the back-end of the nuclear fuel cycle and the transfer and governance of dual-use technology; and 3) articulating possible strategies to minimize the risks of insider threats within nuclear laboratories and power plants. The project has convened nuclear experts and scholars to promote dialogue among regional stakeholders; hosted policy briefings and consultations with government officials and representatives of the nuclear industry; and commissioned papers and publications, often co-authored by regional experts, to enhance academic cooperation and nurture interstate intellectual exchanges.

The project has published fourteen research papers, an edited book, and two issues of æ岹ܲ. Its most recent publications include Governance of Dual-Use Technologies: Theory and Practice; A Worst Practices Guide to Insider Threats: Lessons from Past Mistakes; and The Back-End of the Nuclear Fuel Cycle: An Innovative Storage Concept.

PROJECT CHAIRS

Steven Miller
Harvard University


Robert Rosner
University of Chicago



SENIOR ADVISOR

Scott D. Sagan
Stanford University



PROJECT STAFF

Francesca Giovannini

Kathryn Moffat


FUNDERS

Carnegie Corporation of New York

The Flora Family Foundation

The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation

The Kavli Foundation

The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

 

Select Project Publications

 

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Multinational Storage of Spent Nuclear Fuel and Other High-Level Nuclear Waste: A Roadmap for Moving Forward
Robert D. Sloan (American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences, 2017)

Governance of Dual-Use Technologies: Theory and Practice
Elisa D. Harris, editor (American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences, 2016)

A Worst Practices Guide to Insider Threats: Lessons from Past Mistakes
Matthew Bunn and Scott D. Sagan (American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences, 2014)

 


 

Project

Civil Wars, Violence, and International Responses

The Civil Wars, Violence, and International Responses project stems from the observation that current multilateral approaches for preventing, mitigating, and resolving civil wars and intrastate violence are often far too ambitious. They frequently overpromise stability, security, peace, democracy, and development to countries experiencing high levels of violence and instability. To identify the main drivers of civil wars and their security spillover effects, the project published two issues of æ岹ܲ (“Civil Wars & Global Disorder: Threats & Opportunities” and “Ending Civil Wars: Constraints & Possibilities”) with contributions from scholars, former diplomats, military experts, and policy-makers. The project identified six threats that emerge from civil wars and intrastate violence: pandemic diseases, transnational terrorism, migration, regional instability, great power conflict, and criminality. The project has engaged in extensive domestic and international outreach to share findings and recommendations that deliver a more comprehensive, effective, and integrated approach to conflict prevention and crisis management, which encompasses security, diplomacy, and development strategies in countries such as Colombia, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Syria, Lebanon, and Sri Lanka, among others. Building on these policy discussions, the project will publish a research paper focused on the policy implications of the project’s findings, which will be distributed to relevant policy-makers in the United States and internationally.

PROJECT CHAIRS

Karl Eikenberry
Stanford University; U.S. Army, ret.


Stephen Krasner
Stanford University



PROJECT MEMBERS

Michele Barry
Stanford University


Abdeta D. Beyene
Centre for Dialogue, Research, and Cooperation, Ethiopia


Stephen D. Biddle
Columbia University


Tanja A. Börzel
Freie Universität Berlin


Charles Call
American University


Susanna Campbell
American University


Martha Crenshaw
Stanford University


Lyse Doucet
BBC News


Tanisha Fazal
University of Minnesota


James Fearon
Stanford University


Vanda Felbab-Brown
Brookings Institution


Francis Fukuyama
Stanford University


Sumit Ganguly
Indiana University


Miguel García-Sánchez
Universidad de los Andes, Colombia


Richard Gowan
New York University


Sonja Grimm
University of Konstanz, Germany


Jean-Marie Guéhenno
International Crisis Group


Joseph Hewitt
United States Institute of Peace


Stephen Heydemann
Smith College


Bruce Jones
Brookings Institution


Stathis Kalyvas
Yale University


Nancy Lindborg
United States Institute of Peace


Sarah Kenyon Lischer
Wake Forest University


Clare Lockhart
Institute for State Effectiveness


Aila M. Matanock
University of California, Berkeley


Seyoum Mesfin
Institute for Advanced Research, Ethiopia


Stewart Patrick
Council on Foreign Relations


Barry Posen
Massachusetts Institute of Technology


William Reno
Northwestern University


Thomas Risse
Freie Universität Berlin


Hendrik Spruyt
Northwestern University


Stephen Stedman
Stanford University


Eric Stollenwerk
Freie Universität Berlin


Paul H. Wise
Stanford University



PROJECT STAFF

Francesca Giovannini

Kathryn Moffat

Summers Hammel


FUNDERS

Humanity United

The Smith Richardson Foundation

The Oak Foundation

 

Project Publications

 

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“Ending Civil Wars: Constraints & Possibilities,” æ岹ܲ
edited by Karl Eikenberry & Stephen D. Krasner (2018)

“Civil Wars & Global Disorder: Threats & Opportunities,” æ岹ܲ
edited by Karl Eikenberry & Stephen D. Krasner (2017)

 

Project Meetings

 

Civil Wars, Intrastate Violence, and International Responses

October 22–23, 2018
Peking University
Beijing, China

Organized in collaboration with the U.S.–Asia Security Initiative at Stanford University’s Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center and the School for International Studies at Peking University, this workshop convened thirty-five experts from China, the United States, Ethiopia, and France to discuss intrastate violence and the limits and possibilities of intervention. Some of the topics that were discussed included the degree to which intrastate violence is rooted in domestic versus international factors, the types of global security threats that such violence creates, and the policy options available to the international community or to regional powers.

MEETING CHAIRS

Karl Eikenberry
Stanford University


Stephen Krasner
Stanford University

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Project contributors and other experts participate in a discussion about options for interventions in civil wars.

 


 

Project

Rethinking the Humanitarian Health Response to Violent Conflict

Rethinking the Humanitarian Health Response to Violent Conflict seeks to understand and address current trends in humanitarian contexts that pose new or changing challenges for humanitarian health responders, including the increasingly protracted nature of civil and non-international armed conflict, the fact that many of the world’s most violent places are facing criminal or political violence rather than conflict as conventionally understood, shortfalls in funding, and changing geopolitical relations. This project will bring together political scientists, legal and security experts, health professionals, and humanitarians to examine current challenges to effective humanitarian action and to develop, where necessary, new strategies for preventing civilian harm and delivering critical health services in areas plagued by violent conflict.

The initiative will consist of an ongoing engagement strategy designed to involve domestic and international policy-maker, practitioner, and scholarly audiences, including international organizations and nongovernmental organizations, to help define new strategies for the effective provision of essential health services in areas of armed violence. By working with key audiences and organizations from the earliest stages, the project will help ensure that its research findings are directly relevant for key actors in this field.

Throughout this initiative, the Ƶ will seek opportunities to develop partnerships that will guide a range of specialized outputs tailored for specific audiences. Building on the models successfully used by previous Ƶ projects, this initiative will carry out its work through a mix of convenings, events, and publications. Primary products of the initiative will include a series of publications, such as peer-reviewed journal articles, white papers, and short policy briefs directed at specific audience segments, as well as a series of meetings involving key scholars, practitioners, and others actively concerned with the humanitarian health response to violence. The project will also generate public-facing blog posts, online videos, podcast episodes, and op-eds to reach not only a general audience but also local and field-based humanitarian health providers who may be beyond the reach of targeted project engagement. These efforts will include partnering with universities in the global South and particularly in conflict-affected countries.

PROJECT CHAIRS

Jaime Sepulveda
University of California, San Francisco


Jennifer Welsh
McGill University


Paul Wise
Stanford University



PROJECT STAFF

Francesca Giovannini

Kathryn Moffat

Rebecca Tiernan

 

Project Meetings

 

Exploratory Meeting: Rethinking the Humanitarian Health Response to Violent Conflict

January 23–24, 2019
House of the Ƶ
Cambridge, MA

Building on prior small-group consultations with a variety of experts, this exploratory discussion convened scholars, policy-makers, and practitioners from a variety of disciplines to consider how the Ƶ could make important and pragmatic contributions to the development of more effective humanitarian health responses in areas of violent conflict.

MEETING CHAIRS

Jennifer Welsh
McGill University


Paul Wise
Stanford University



SPEAKERS

Michael Barnett
The George Washington University


Anne Patterson
Yale University; formerly, U.S. Department of State


Ron Waldman
The George Washington University

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Project Cochair Jennifer Welsh (McGill University) during a breakout session with Ambassador Anne Patterson (Yale University) and J. Stephen Morrison (Center for Strategic and International Studies)

Exploratory Meeting: Rethinking the Humanitarian Health Response to Violent Conflict

June 10–11, 2019
Chatham House
London, United Kingdom

Held in collaboration with the Centre for Global Health Security at Chatham House and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, the meeting brought together scholars, practitioners, and policy-makers from the global health, humanitarian, and security sectors to explore how future work by the three hosting organizations could help define new strategies for the provision of essential health services in areas of violent conflict.

MEETING CHAIRS

Rita Dayoub
Chatham House


David Heymann
Chatham House


Jaime Sepulveda
University of California, San Francisco


Neha Singh
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine


Jennifer Welsh
McGill University


Paul Wise
Stanford University

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Front row: Ben Wakefield (Chatham House), Rita Dayoub (Chatham House), Jaime Sepulveda (UCSF), and Kathryn Moffat (American Ƶ of Arts and Sciences); Back row: Paul Wise (Stanford University), Jennifer Welsh (McGill University), Louis Lillywhite (Chatham House), and Alexandra Squires McCarthy (Chatham House)