REPORTS
Assessing the G8 Global Partnership:
From Kananaskis to St. Petersburg
PDF Format
A report released July 2006.
This report examines the progress made to
date by the G8 Global Partnership Against the Spread of Weapons and
Materials of Mass Destruction in securing and reducing the WMD complex,
weapons, and materials in Russia and elsewhere. At the 2002 G8 Summit in
Kananaskis, Canada, world leaders announced their commitment of $20
billion over 10 years to be dedicated to preventing catastrophic terrorism
and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. Four years later,
the G8 Partnership countries have pledged approximately $17.5 billion to
this work, but it has not received the sustained attention and effort
needed to reduce these dangers. The report assesses that while the G8
leaders have given important rhetorical priority to the work of securing
WMD stocks, progress to date does not yet reflect the necessary urgency of
the threat of WMD terrorism. The report gives recommendations for how the
Global Partnership countries can move more quickly to ensure that funds
are reducing the most urgent threats of securing nuclear and biological
materials.

Protecting against the
Spread of Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Weapons An Action Agenda
for the Global Partnership
A four-volume report released
January 2003.
An international consortium of
research institutions has collaborated to assess global efforts to account
for, secure, and dismantle nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons and
materials in this four-volume report. The first volume, "An Action
Agenda", makes actionable recommendations for moving the G8 Global
Partnership from financial promises to implemented projects.
In Russian:
ПРОТИВОДЕЙСТВИЕ РАСПРОСТРАНЕНИЮ
ЯДЕРНОГО, БИОЛОГИЧЕСКОГО
И
ХИМИЧЕСКОГО ОРУЖИЯ
Первая
Часть

The G8 Global Partnership
against the Spread of Weapons of Mass Destruction
A Guide to the Global Partnership
released in April 2005.
The PIR-Center has authored a succinct overview of the G8 Global
Partnership detailing its past, current and prospective efforts. The guide
is intended for a broad range of policy experts associated with the
execution or analysis of Global Partnership programs. An outline of the
guide is available on the PIR-Center website under
http://www.pircenter.org/data/news/GP_sod.pdf. The book is in
the process of being translated into English.
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Gp Updates
Global Partnership Scorecard (July 2006)
PDF Format
Bibliography of
Sources for the Global Partnership Scorecard 2006
PDF Format
Global Partnership Scorecard (May 2004)
PDF Format
Global Partnership
Update
A newsletter published by the
Strengthening the Global Partnership Project.
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SGP Issue Briefs
A paper series on Global Partnership implementation issues by the
Strengthening the Global Partnership Project.
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December 2006 |
The Nuclear Aspect
of the Global Partnership Program in Ukraine: Has There Been Progress?
By Sergiy Kondratov, Scientific and Technical Center on the Export and
Import of Special Technologies, Hardware, and Materials (STC), in Kyiv,
Ukraine |
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December 2006 |
The Role
of Civil Society and the Global Partnership Against the Spread of Weapons
of Mass Destruction
By Olga Kosharna, Deputy Editor-in-Chief of Security and
Nonproliferation (Ukraine)
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November 2006 |
China and the G8 Global Partnership By
Nikita Perfilyev, Tomsk State University, Tomsk, Russia. |
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September 2006 |
The EU WMD Budget:
Bridging the Gap between Objectives and Financial Resources By
Aline Dewaele, Program Assistant for Arms Control and Disarmament at the International Security Information Service, Europe in
Brussels. |
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April 2006 |
Security
Conscious Workforce as the First Line of Defense Against Catastrophic
Terrorism By Dr. Igor Khripunov, Associate Director of the Center for International Trade and
Security (CITS) at the University of Georgia in Athens (USA) |
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February 2006 |
Implementing
Chemical Weapons Destruction in Russia: An Investigation of Best Practices
in WMD Demilitarization By Dr. Paul
F. Walker, Legacy Program Director, and Janina de Guzman, Legacy Program
Associate, Global Green USA
Annex 1: Russian Chemical Weapon
Stockpiles: Agent Type, Agent Amount, and Destruction Schedules
Annex 2: Global Partnership Commitments to Chemical Weapons-Related
Demilitarization in Russia
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October 2005 |
Bioterrorism and a Layered Approach to Biodefense By Jenifer
Mackby, fellow at the Center for Strategic & International Studies, and Ola Dahlman,
former Deputy Director of the Swedish Defense Research Institute |
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September 2005 |
Global Cleanout of Civil Nuclear Material: Toward a Comprehensive,
Threat-Driven Response By Philipp C. Bleek, Georgetown
University, Washington, D.C |
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March 2005 |
Ukraine and the
Global Partnership: Opportunity for Progress
By
Roman Sehling and Mary Beth Nikitin, Center for Strategic & International
Studies, Washington D.C. |
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January 2005 |
Piggybacking Global Partnership Pledges:
Lessons Learned
By
Austin Carson, Center for Strategic & International
Studies, Washington D.C. |
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November 2004 |
Naval Nuclear Clean-Up in
Northwest Russia: Lessons Learned and a Roadmap to Completion
By Ole
Reistad, University of Trondheim, Norway.
Summary Version
PDF Format
Full Version
PDF Format |
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Papers
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December |
Nuclear Security Culture: The Case of Russia
By Igor Khripunov and James Holmes.
Center for International Trade and Security, December 2004.
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November |
Targeting Europe: The Threat from Dirty
Bombs
By
Anja Dalgaard-Nielsen, Line Selmer Friborg,
and Martin Fernando Jakobsen.
Danish Institute of International Studies,
November 2004.
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October |
The Role of the EU in International
Non-proliferation and Disarmament Assistance
By Ian Anthony
(SIPRI).
Geneva Centre for
Security Policy, Occasional Paper 44, October 2004.
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September |
Coordinating Submarine Dismantlement Assistance in
Russia
By Cristina
Chuen. Center for Nonproliferation Studies,
September 2004.
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September |
Switzerland and Cooperative Threat Reduction
By
Derek Lutterbeck. Geneva Centre for
Security Policy, Occasional Paper 43, September 2004. |
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September |
Crude Nukes on the
Loose?
By
Morten Bremer Mærli. Norwegian Institute
of
International Affairs,
Working Paper 664, September 2004.
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July |
Protecting the
European homeland. The CBR dimension
By
Gustav Lindstrom.
Institute for Security Studies, Chaillot Paper 69,
July 2004.
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April |
Reducing Threats at the Source: A
European Perspective on Cooperative Threat Reduction
By Ian
Anthony. Stockholm International Peace Research Institute,
Research Report 19, April 2004.
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December |
Fighting
proliferation — European perspectives
By Mark
Smith, Bruno Tertrais and Jean Pascal Zanders. Edited by Gustav Lindstrom
and Burkard Schmitt.
Institute for Security Studies, Chaillot Paper 66,
December 2003.
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November |
Germany and the
Process of Excess Nuclear Weapons Elimination in Russia
By Andrey Frolov, translated by Alexander
Nikitin. PIR Center, Moscow. November 2003. |
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June
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EU Cooperative Threat Reduction Activities in
Russia.
By Kathrin Höhl, Harald Müller and Annette Schaper,
edited by Burkard Schmitt. Institute for Security Studies Chaillot Paper
61,
June 2003.
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May |
On the G8 Global Partnership Initiative: Is
Any Nonproliferation and Security Concern Equally Pursued?
By Maurizio Martellini (LNCV,
IWG-ENCI, BCSIA-Harvard University). Presentation to the Rome Meeting
"Assessing
the G-8 Global Partnership After One Year:
Status Report and
Future Challenges"
of May
5, 2003.
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Russia Faces Europe.
By Dov Lynch.
Institute for Security Studies Chaillot Paper 60, May 2003.
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The G-8 Global Partnership Initiative:
Prioritizing Nonproliferation and Security Concerns.
By
Maurizio Martellini (LNCV, IWG-ENCI,
BCSIA-Harvard University) and Kenneth Luongo (RANSAC).
Paper submitted for consideration at the Rome
Meeting "Assessing
the G-8 Global Partnership After One Year:
Status Report and
Future Challenges"
of May 5, 2003.
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The Role of the G-8 In International Peace and
Security.
By Dr. Risto E. J. Penttilä. The International
Institute of Strategic Studies Adelphi Paper #355, May 2003. |
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