2. Chapter 2 A History of the Idea of Nuclear Security: 1945-2006
3. Chapter 3 The 2010 Nuclear Security Summit at Washington
4. Chapter 4 The 2012 Nuclear Security Summit at Seoul
5. Chapter 5 The 2014 Nuclear Security Summit at The Hague
6. Chapter 6 Coming Full Circle: The 2016 Washington Summit
7. Chapter 7 Conclusion: The NSS as a Learning Forum
Amandeep Gill is a Visiting Professor at King’s College London, UK, and Senior Fellow at the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies in Geneva where he leads the project on the International Digital Health & AI Research Collaborative (I-DAIR). Previously, he was Executive Director of the Secretariat of the UN Secretary-General's High Level Panel on Digital Cooperation and India’s Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the Conference on Disarmament.
This book describes the four Nuclear Security Summits held over 2010-2016 at the initiative of U.S. President Barack Obama. The author draws upon his unique vantage point as a participant in the Summits, exclusive interviews with practitioners, and access to primary documents, to write an engaging history of the NSS and of nuclear security in general. The story of the NSS is also in part the story of multilateral nuclear forums, which have sprung up regularly since the dawn of the nuclear age to address perceived nuclear dangers. The success of these Summits in addressing the threat of nuclear terrorism holds important lessons for the design and work of nuclear forums today and into the future. The author presents a new approach to assessing ‘international learning’ that has important implications for the design of multilateral forums and updates the Cold War areas of nuclear knowledge being ‘learnt’ in the light of the NSS experience and other recent developments. This work will be of interest to scholars and practitioners in security studies, nuclear history, and International Relations.
Amandeep S. Gill is Visiting Professor at King's College London, UK, and Executive Director and Co-Lead of the Secretariat of the UN Secretary-General’s High-level Panel on Digital Cooperation, Geneva, Switzerland.