Home
Repository Search
Listing
Academics - Research coordination office
R-RC -Acad
Admin-Research Repository
Engineering and Computer Science
Computer Science
Engineering
Mathematics
Languages
Arabic
Chinese
English
French
Persian
Urdu
German
Korean
Management Sciences
Economics
Governance and Public Policy
Management Sciences
Management Sciences Rawalpindi Campus
ORIC
Oric-Research
Social Sciences
Education
International Relations
Islamic thought & Culture
Media and Communication Studies
Pakistan Studies
Peace and Conflict Studies
Psychology
Content Details
Back to Department Listing
Title
US 123 AGREEMENTS WITH INDIA: IMPLICATIONSFOR NUCLEAR NON-PROLIFERATIONTREATY
Author(s)
Ubaid Yousaf
Abstract
Abstract The 123 Agreement established the legal framework for significant transfers of nuclear material or equipment of United States to other countries. This thesis establishes that the Indo-US Nuclear deal has challenged the efficacy of the NPT and established nuclear nonproliferation norms and orders. The primary research method for this study is qualitative while deductive reasoning is used by the researcher. Moreover, the objectives of the research are to comprehend the impact of 123 agreement on NPT, explain policy impact of 123agreements on other Non NPT states. The realism lens is used to explain the argument. Details collected from secondary resources including books, research papers, journals and articles. The agreement has raised broader questions about the criteria-based approach to emerging nuclear aspirants and the need for strengthening global governance in the nuclear field. Moving forward, it is important for all states to work together to strengthen nuclear governance regimes for safety, security, and non-proliferation and to ensure that all states adhere to their rights and responsibilities. The thesis aim to enhance the NPT framework by strengthening and reconsidering the review process, promoting dialogue, improving safeguards, fostering international cooperation, and adapting to evolving geopolitical dynamics, thereby encouraging responsible behavior
Type
Thesis/Dissertation MS
Faculty
Social Sciences
Department
International Relations
Language
English
Publication Date
2023-11-23
Subject
International Relations
Publisher
NA
Contributor(s)
NA
Format
16 Edition Chicago Manual
Identifier
NA
Source
NA
Relation
NA
Coverage
NA
Rights
NA
Category
NA
Description
Attachment
Name
Timestamp
Action
59f0fc1f69. Final Report...pdf 1.pdf
2023-12-21 11:37:07
Download