Empowerment

International Policies and Public opinion

International Policies:
Why do nuclear weapons play an important role in international policies? First they are more a political weapon than a military because there use for military purpose is very limited and even states are working on reducing their role in security doctrines. Within their role for “nuclear deterrence” they are more a political instrument to put pressure on other states. They are also defining hierarchies in international policies. The five official nuclear weapons states are also the five veto powers of the UN Security Council. Through that they can influence policy but also economy. For example no UN sanction like an embargo can be imposed without China, USA, Russia, France and Great Britain agreeing on it. This is how the five powers are dictating the rules to 184 other nations.
The so created imbalance is becoming visible also in the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Here nuclear weapons states and non-nuclear weapons states are named and manifested. But the treaty will determine to abolish the imbalance through oblige the nuclear weapons states to get disarm their nuclear weapons until an early date. This is what the non-nuclear weapons states together with representatives from civil society are demanding. This common demand for a comprehensive framework of agreements or a nuclear weapons convention is becoming stronger in the past years.

Public Opinion:
Opinion polls from 2008 conducted in 21 countries have revealed that, on average, 76% of people worldwide support the negotiation of a treaty banning and eliminating all nuclear weapons.


Supporter of a Nuclear Weapons Convention:
The Non-Aligned Movement, representing 116 parties to the NPT, strongly supported a convention at the Review Conference. The following nations also called for a convention in their statements: Algeria, Austria, Brazil, Chile, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Egypt, Holy See, Indonesia, Iran, Kenya, Lebanon, Libya, Liechtenstein, Malaysia, Mexico, Mongolia, Morocco, Norway, Philippines, Qatar, Senegal, Switzerland, Thailand, Tunisia, Yemen.

Method 1: Your opinion

MATERIAL: enough space
LOCATION AND TIME: inside or outside, time is depending on number of questions and length of interviews from 5-10 Minutes

What do you think! People need to position themselves according to an imaginary line from yes/very to no/never. Then you can interview people why they are standing at this point of the line. If you hear arguments changing your mind you can also change your position. It sometimes makes sense to ask the same questions in the beginning and at the end of a workshop to see if positions have changed.
Examples for questions to begin a workshop could be:

The opinion barometer can also be used within a special topic for example to motivate students to start a discussion. Examples are:

Method 2: Make your own survey

MATERIAL: computer with printer and paper, internet, pens
LOCATION AND TIME: school area or city center, one day

Surveys can provide us with useful information about people’s opinions and their level of knowledge. You could conduct a survey to find out what other students at your school, or people from the wider community, think and know about nuclear weapons. Analyze your results and share what you discover!
Collecting personal data such as age, occupation, sex and city of residence can be useful. For example, you might discover that young people know more about nuclear weapons than older people! Steps:

  1. Design your survey based on what you hope to learn.
  2. Distribute your survey along with instructions for returning it to you once completed.
  3. Compile the survey results in a spreadsheet.
  4. Analyze the results and pick out statistics that people will find interesting.
  5. Write a report of your findings, and consider sending it to your local paper.

An idea is to split the poll into three parts: Personal Data (Age, Sex, City), knowledge and personal opinion.

Nuclear Weapons Convention

Why is a nuclear weapons convention necessary?

>> The non-further-proliferation regime must be transformed in a real non-proliferation system in which the central element of the Non-Proliferation-Treaty is replaced by a Nuclear Weapons Convention. For making this possible also the framework needs to be transformed which means that new international treaties need to enter into force to create trust like the CTBT (Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty), OuterSpace Treaty (Prohibition of weapons systems in outer space) and FMCT (Fissile Material Cut-Off Treaty).

What would a Convention do?
The model of a Nuclear weapons Convention (NWC) from 1999, overworked in 2007 by IPPNW (physicians), IALANA (lawyers) and INESAP (scientists) would prohibit the development, testing, production, stockpiling, transfer, use and threat of use of nuclear weapons. It would require all nuclear-armed countries to destroy their nuclear weapons in stages. The model also prohibits the production of fissile material suitable for making nuclear weapons and that the delivery systems are destroyed or converted to a non-nuclear function.

Phases of elimination
The Convention outlines a series of five phases for the elimination of nuclear weapons:

  1. Taking nuclear weapons off alert,
  2. Removing weapons from deployment,
  3. Removing nuclear warheads from their delivery vehicles,
  4. Disabling the warheads, removing and disfiguring the “pits”, and
  5. Placing the fissile material under international control.

In the initial phases the US and Russia, which possess 95% of the world’s nuclear weapons, are required to make the deepest cuts in their nuclear arsenals.

Verification and Implementation
States would need to establish a national agency which is taking care for the implementation of the treaty on a national level. The NWC would establish an agency to ensure that countries comply with the terms of the treaty similar to the biological and chemical weapons conventions. It will be responsible for verification, ensuring compliance, and decision making, and will comprise a Conference of States Parties, an Executive Council and a Technical Secretariat.
Provisions are included for consultation, cooperation and fact finding to clarify and resolve questions of interpretation with respect to compliance and other matters. A legal dispute may be referred to the International Court of Justice by mutual consent of States Parties. The Agency is also empowered to request an advisory opinion from the ICJ on a legal dispute.

For more information visit icanw.org.

Method 1: How could a world without nuclear weapons look like?

MATERIAL: colorful cards, flipchart and markers
LOCATION AND TIME: tables, and a board or a wall to put up the cards, approx. 10-20 minutes depending on the size of the group

What would really be changed in world without nuclear weapons? Theoretical two different scenarios would be possible: A world on the way to peace or a world on a way to a conventional world war. What do you think is more likely? The group is collecting key words or pictures on cards on the question: How could a world without nuclear weapons look like?

Possible answers:

Method 2: Is a nuclear weapons free world possible?

MATERIAL: chairs
LOCATION AND TIME: it should be a quiet and comfortable location and a minimum of 30 minutes time.

For discussing the question of the dimension of a nuclear weapons free world along the question „Which ways of thinking and structures of power needs to be changed to create the political will to abolish nuclear weapons?“ the method of a “Fishbowl discussion” can be used.

The idea of a fishbowl discussion is that the discussion isn’t dominated by a few persons and everybody gets the possibility to contribute. You put up a circle of outer chairs were everybody finds a place the so called “fishbowl”. In the middle you put up 3-5 chairs depending of the size of the group for the “fishes”. Only who is sitting at the inner chairs is allowed to speak. Everybody is invited to sit down at these chairs to contribute but always one chair must be free for somebody new willing to join the discussion. That means if all chairs are occupied one person, the one speaking now or said the most, needs to come to an end and leave the middle, so that one chair gets free again. The people in the middle can discuss among each other.

Further questions on the issue could be:

Victories of Peace and Abolition

The movement for the elimination of nuclear weapons has had some significant victories since it began. It’s important that we celebrate these victories: they inspire us to persevere, even when we don’t seem to be making much progress. They’re proof that the will of the people can prevail.

Method 1: Brainstorming - Get active

MATERIAL: paper and pens, tabe, computer with internet
LOCATION AND TIME: room with a free wall, approx. 30-60 minutes

Young activism as two pillars: Youth are getting active when they can implement their own ideas. An action is successful if it is also fun. As motivation for an own action it can be helpful to have a look on what already was done successfully. Look at websites like bang-europe.org or ippnw-students.org to see what kind of action people take for nuclear abolition. Design an overview on the different kinds of actions and add your own ideas!

How such an overview could look like:

Outreach Exhibitions, movies, memorials, signature collection, concerts, workshops in school and with youth groups, seminars, articles, flyer, paiting, theater, information desks in the city such as My cup of tea or Target X, article in newspapers
Protest Demonstration, open letter, banners, fast, flyer
Lobby Letters to members of parliament, mayors or others, attending international conferences, visitng embassies and missions
Communication & networking Intercultural meetings, festivals, seminars, sponsored travel

Method 2: Abolition Online

MATERIAL: computer with internet
LOCATION AND TIME: long-term project at the internet

You would stay updated on nuclear weapons and also inform others? Where would this work better out than at the internet? Here you have a few ideas on online projects for an exchange of information.

 

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