"In order to curb nuclear-weapons proliferation, it is of
fundamental importance to identify the underlying rationale for
certain states to seek a nuclear-weapons option, as well as to
understand why the vast majority of states, possessing the
necessary technology, do not develop nuclear weapons. The
international community still has much to learn in this regard and
"Nuclear Logics" is a valuable and timely contribution to this
discussion."--Dr. Hans Blix, chairman of the Weapons of Mass
Destruction Commission
"Professor Solingen has illuminated an important and often
neglected aspect of nuclear motivations, namely the domestic
conditions that underlie a country's decision to acquire nuclear
weapons. Her well-researched and powerful argument asserts that
nuclear-weapons programs are more likely to emerge from states that
are hostile to economic openness and, conversely, that they are
less likely where states are more willing to integrate with the
global political economy."--Mitchell B. Reiss, College of William
and Mary
"Solingen not only provides a cogent account of the divergent
nuclear trajectories of East Asia and the Middle East, but develops
a powerful general explanation resting on whether the state's
ruling coalition is inward looking or is geared to integrating with
the rest of the world. Both in its challenge to standard views and
in its strong positive arguments, this is a study of great
value."--Robert Jervis, Columbia University
"Etel Solingen's "Nuclear Logics" provides the depth and insight
needed to understand today's urgent dilemmas of nuclear
proliferation. She convincingly shows that opening up shuttered
states to expanded international economic ties canundermine the
political constituencies that favor nuclear weapons
programs."--Jack Snyder, Columbia University
""Nuclear Logics" is a first-class piece of work. It deals with
a prominent issue, and its central approach--doing a focused,
detailed comparison of two regions that started out much the same
but have differed in their subsequent histories on
proliferation--generates a wealth of interesting and instructive
insights."--John Mueller, Ohio State University
"What is most impressive and significant about Solingen's
scholarship is its breadth. Her prose is clear and often elegant. I
believe her book, which truly is pioneering in both the
international-relations and nonproliferation fields, is accessible
to both scholars and university students. I am sure it will become
required reading in many graduate courses."--William C. Potter,
Monterey Institute of International Studies
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