Series

The Program on Strategic Stability Evaluation (POSSE) is a joint project by CISTP and CNS. The purpose of POSSE is to reinvigorate inter-disciplinary, international scholarship on issues of strategic stability in a post-nuclear weapons era. An important component of this effort entails stimulating not only new policy-relevant scholarship but nurturing dialogue among the next generation of international scholars on nuclear disarmament and risk reduction issues – with a particular focus on the United States, the Russian Federation and the Peoples Republic of China.

Publishers: James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies (CNS)
Center for International Strategy, Technology, and Policy (CISTP)
Publications: India and Pakistan: Beyond Minimum Nuclear Deterrence?
Diffusion of Nuclear Knowledge: Technology, Policy and Posture
Policy Memorandum: How to Solve Sino-US Missile Defense Dilemma?
US Nuclear Weapons Abroad: Where Next?
The Nuclear Habit in the Public Mind
The Sino-Pakistani Nuclear Cooperation: Further Development in the New Era
Creating a Framework to Assess Military Transparency
Motivations of China’s Nuclear Force Modernization
The Logic of Foreign Nuclear Deployments
Cooperative Strategic Stability and Strategic Culture (Case of Russia)
Friends Don’t Let Friends Proliferate in the Middle East or East Asia
Nuclear Incoherence: Deterrence Theory and Non-Strategic Nuclear Weapons in Russia
China-US Trust Building on Nuclear Strategy: A Chinese Perspective
Certainty of Uncertainty: Nuclear Strategy with Chinese Characteristics
Establishing New China-US Strategic Stability: Opportunities and Challenges
The Limitations of the IAEA in Non-Proliferation Area
Nuclear Policy and the Politics of Knowledge Production
India and Pakistan: Beyond Minimum Nuclear Deterrence?
Policy Memorandum: How to Solve Sino-US Missile Defense Dilemma?
Policy Memorandum on Promoting Trust-Building Between the US and China in the Field of Nuclear Security
Policy Memorandum on Nuclear Non-Proliferation, Power Dynamics, and Regional Stability Revisited
JavaScript has been disabled in your browser