Science, Technology, and Global Security
Past Projects – 1950s
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The Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs : Since the first
meeting in 1957, the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs have
endeavored to be an international venue for influential scholars and public
figures to discuss, as individuals and not as government or organization
representatives, ways to reduce the danger of armed conflict and to seek
cooperative solutions for global problems. With more than five Fellows at the
first meeting in Pugwash, Nova Scotia, the Academy has maintained a strong
presence in the conferences and for many years was home to the U.S. Pugwash
Committee. Over the succeeding decades, Pugwash conferences, workshops, and
symposia made vital contributions to the evolving framework of nuclear,
chemical and biological weapons arms control, including the 1963 Limited Test
Ban Treaty, the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, and the 1992 Chemical
Weapons Convention, among others. In the 1980s, U.S. Pugwash came under the
purview of the Academy’s Committee on International Security Studies.
Throughout the Cold War, the Academy, as the U.S. sponsor of Pugwash, supported
the principle of continued dialogue between East and West as a necessary
condition for avoiding nuclear war. The major contributions of Pugwash were
internationally recognized in 1995 when the organization and then Pugwash
President Joseph Rotblat were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Rotblat,
an Academy Foreign Honorary Member, had been been involved with Pugwash since
attending the initial 1957 conference.
Go to the Pugwash website.
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