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Rival Hierarchies and the Origins of Nuclear Technology Sharing
by
Miller, Nicholas L.
, Colgan, Jeff D.
in
Case studies
/ Cooperation
/ Hierarchies
/ International cooperation
/ Loyalty
/ Nuclear energy
/ Nuclear weapons
/ Safeguards
/ Secrecy
/ Sharing
/ Superpowers
/ Technology
/ TRANSNATIONAL PROCESSES
2019
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Rival Hierarchies and the Origins of Nuclear Technology Sharing
by
Miller, Nicholas L.
, Colgan, Jeff D.
in
Case studies
/ Cooperation
/ Hierarchies
/ International cooperation
/ Loyalty
/ Nuclear energy
/ Nuclear weapons
/ Safeguards
/ Secrecy
/ Sharing
/ Superpowers
/ Technology
/ TRANSNATIONAL PROCESSES
2019
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Rival Hierarchies and the Origins of Nuclear Technology Sharing
by
Miller, Nicholas L.
, Colgan, Jeff D.
in
Case studies
/ Cooperation
/ Hierarchies
/ International cooperation
/ Loyalty
/ Nuclear energy
/ Nuclear weapons
/ Safeguards
/ Secrecy
/ Sharing
/ Superpowers
/ Technology
/ TRANSNATIONAL PROCESSES
2019
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Rival Hierarchies and the Origins of Nuclear Technology Sharing
Journal Article
Rival Hierarchies and the Origins of Nuclear Technology Sharing
2019
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Overview
In the 1950s, the United States and Soviet Union abandoned secrecy and began sharing nuclear technology internationally. Soon thereafter, the two superpowers worked together to create the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to place safeguards on nuclear assistance and eventually added other nonproliferation measures. What explains these decisions? We argue that an international hierarchy framework offers a robust explanation for the superpowers’behavior. We identify three distinct mechanisms through which rival hierarchies can influence the internal workings of one another: competitive shaming, outbidding, and interhierarchy cooperation. We then probe the plausibility of our argument by investigating multiple observable implications in our case study of nuclear politics. We show that Soviet competitive shaming motivated the United States’ Atoms for Peace program, which sought to strengthen the loyalty of client states or attract new ones. In response, the Soviet Union attempted to outbid the United States with its own technology-sharing program. Ultimately, Moscow and Washington cooperated on the IAEA to limit the risks that nuclear sharing posed to their own dominant positions vis-à-vis subordinate states.
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Subject
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