Editorial: Disarmament and Development – the International Context

  • Robin Luckham
Volume 16 Number 4
Published: October 1, 1985
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1759-5436.1985.mp16004001.x
The interconnections between international economic recession, the new Cold War and militarisation in the South provide the context for the articles in the IDS Bulletin 'Disarmament and World Development: Is There a Way Forward', from October 1985. Contributors were asked to reassess four key reports on development, disarmament and security issues. All were undertaken during a period of transition in the global economy and the Cold War (1979–83). Despite differences of emphasis they all advocate an integrated global approach to world economic and military problems, the restructuring of North–South economic relationships, strengthening of detente and reductions in the allocation of resources for military purposes. But why, then, have they had so little impact on policy and still less on the march of events? Contributors to the Bulletin were also asked to address how disarmament and development could be put back on the international agenda. For instance, is there an adequate political case for linking disarmament to development and does military spending in fact entrench underdevelopment?

Keywords:

  • conflict
  • development
  • security
From Issue: Vol. 16 No. 4 (1985) | Disarmament and World Development: Is There a Way Forward