
Nuclear Order in the Asia-Pacific
Nuclear Order in the Asia-Pacific explores the evolving perceptions of the role of nuclear weapons in national and regional security. The project addresses a range of topics that affect the nuclear order in the region, including views on US extended deterrence, China’s nuclear modernisation, North Korea’s nuclear program, as well as regional debates on nuclear latency and history.
- NUCLEAR ORDER IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC
80 Years Since Nuclear Use
APLN commemorates 80 years since the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki with a series of eight short interpretive essays.
- NUCLEAR ORDER IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC
The SLCM-N and Japan’s Three Non-Nuclear Principles
Hideo Asano explores the potential political impact of the US deployment of the Nuclear-armed Sea-Launched Cruise Missile on Japan’s Three Non-Nuclear Principles.
- NUCLEAR ORDER IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC
Strategic Stability and Nuclear Salience: Japan, South Korea, and Extended Deterrence in ...
Joel Petersson Ivre explores how Japanese and Korean understandings of strategic stability contribute to increased nuclear salience in East Asia.
- NUCLEAR ORDER IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC
Drivers and Constraints of Nuclear Proliferation: Regional Responses to South Korean ...
Jun Bong-geun and Joel Petersson-Ivre summarise the findings of APLN's project on regional views of South Korean proliferation.
- NUCLEAR ORDER IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC
No Domino: How Japan’s Experience Can Dissuade South Korea from Going Nuclear
Akira Kawasaki and Keiko Nakamura argue that Japan's experience in cultivating strong civil society resistance to nuclear weapons can be shared with South Korea and prevent its nuclear proliferation.
- NUCLEAR ORDER IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC
No Longer In Good Standing: How Mongolia Would View South Korea Going Nuclear
Jargalsaikhan Enkhsaikhan explains the options available to Mongolia if South Korea were to go nuclear.