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Manpreet Sethi

Sethi, Manpreet

Sethi, Manpreet

Project Head on Nuclear Security, Centre for Air Power Studies, New Delhi, India. Email- manpreetsethi@hotmail.com

Job Title

Project Head on Nuclear Security, Centre for Air Power Studies, New Delhi, India. Email- manpreetsethi@hotmail.com

Dr Manpreet Sethi is Senior Fellow, Centre for Air Power Studies, New Delhi and heads its Nuclear Security project. She is also Fellow, International Relations, Centre de Sciences Humaines, New Delhi. On the research faculty of Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses, New Delhi, from 1997 to 2001, she focussed on nuclear energy proliferation, export controls, and disarmament.

Manpreet Sethi completed her Ph.D from School of International Studies, JNU, New Delhi in 1997. Between 2002 and 2005 she carried out a Research Project for the Department of Atomic Energy on Nuclear Energy for India’s Energy Security at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, New Delhi. She is the author of Argentina’s Nuclear Policy and co-author of Nuclear Deterrence and Diplomacy and has written a number of academic articles in national and international journals. She contributes regularly to national and international dailies and is visiting lecturer at several training establishments of the Indian armed forces.

ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR

India’s Disarmament Initiative 1988: Continuing Relevance, Valid Pointers for an NWFW   ( Peace and Security )
Get Full Text in PDF Abstract The run up to the NPT Review Conference in 2010 brought nuclear disarmament into focus. Transitory though this trend turned out to be, it nevertheless became a trigger for India to re-examine its own position on disarmament. In order to take a considered view on the subject, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh instituted an Informal Group in October 2010 with the specific mandate to examine the relevance of the Action Plan that had been presented by Rajiv Gandhi in...
Universal Nuclear Disarmament   ( Peace and Security )
Get Full Text in PDF 1. Introduction Universal nuclear disarmament** is not a new concept. From the time that the weapon was first used in 1945, and once the horrendous destruction that it could cause was understood, countries have struggled with the challenge of how to put the genie back into the bottle. To little avail. Nuclear abolition has proved to be an elusive objective owing to the lack of sufficient political will to actually undertake the exercise. In fact, the politics of the...