Banning the bomb, smashing the patriarchy

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Bibliographic Information

Banning the bomb, smashing the patriarchy

Ray Acheson

Rowman & Littlefield, c2021

  • : cloth

Available at  / 6 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 359-398

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Two years ago, at the United Nations in New York, activists and diplomats banned nuclear weapons. This book covers the story of their collective activism-a story of courage and hope, as well as lessons learned, that will hopefully inform and inspire others working for social justice. The story of banning the bomb belongs to these diplomats, along with activists who brought a legacy of protest and vision for an alternative future to the international table. This is, ultimately, a story of resistance and of movement building. It is a story of people saying, "!Ya basta!," enough, to the nuclear-armed governments. But this movement did not just reject what the nuclear-armed were offering. It consciously, creatively, and collectively sought to build something new-to generate and promote ideas, arguments, and frameworks that would disrupt mainstream myths and narratives about nuclear weapons, institute new international norms and laws, and ultimately set in place key mechanisms for the abolition of the atomic bomb. I was directly involved in this work as an activist with one of the partner organizations of ICAN. I represented my organization, the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), on ICAN's International Steering Group. The steering group is the policy-making body of ICAN, a group of ten activist organizations from around the world that works with ICAN's staff team to lead the campaign. As a genderqueer feminist peace activist, I tried to promote a feminist vision of both process and product in my work with ICAN-to bring theories and experiences of feminist and queer activists to the task of banning nuclear weapons. The nuclear weapon policy and discourse space is one that commonly reeks of toxic masculinity.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter 1. "Terminally Unserious": Ideologies and Oppressions of Nuclear Weapons Chapter 2. Rage Against the Bomb: A Brief History of Antinuclear Efforts Chapter 3. Reclaiming Our Time: Changing Discourse, Changing Minds Chapter 4. Karaoke and Campaigning: Building a Case and a Community Chapter 5. Revitalizing a Movement Chapter 6. From Deterrence to Disarmament: How the Humanitarian Initiative Disrupted the Nuclear Weapon Orthodoxy Chapter 7. Courage, My Love: How Nuclear-Free States Fought for the Ban Chapter 8. Getting Our Ban On, Part One: The What Chapter 9. Getting Our Ban On, Part Two: The How Conclusion Bibliography

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