Disarmament as Humanitarian Action

Disarmament as Humanitarian Action: Making Multilateral Negotiations Work (DHA) is a research project carried out at the United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research (UNIDIR). This project, launched in 2004, examines current difficulties for the international community in tackling disarmament and arms control challenges.[1]

Research activities

The DHA[1] project’s research focuses on two major themes:

  • Showing how humanitarian perspectives add value to disarmament and arms control work, and how proposing new ways these approaches could assist multilateral processes;
  • Examining multilateral negotiating processes more broadly to help practitioners "think outside the box" in their work by drawing on interdisciplinary research.

Publications

These themes are explored in three UNIDIR publications drawing from a range of contributors in civil society, diplomacy, and the policy and research fields:

Current work

An important emphasis of the DHA[1] project’s work in 2007 is to communicate its research findings to multilateral practitioners. As one element of these efforts, the DHA[1] project created the Disarmament Insight initiative with the Geneva Forum.[2] This initiative is prompting constructive and creative engagement in the multilateral disarmament community through a range of activities including workshops and online resources building on the previous respective work of both DHA[1] and the Geneva Forum.[2]

The DHA[1] project is supported by the Governments of Norway and the Netherlands.

gollark: It actually used to have green threads like Go, fun fact.
gollark: A regular WASM application might be *megabytes* in size.
gollark: Also, in download size, *massively*.
gollark: Typically stuff which isn't very CPU-bound and needs to do a bunch of native iO calls.
gollark: WASM is actually worse than JS in some areas.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on June 11, 2007. Retrieved June 21, 2007.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. "The Geneva Forum".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.