International safeguards and export controls are central to ensuring international confidence in the peaceful uses of nuclear materials and technologies and to achieving adequate oversight on the transfer and use of nuclear materials, technology, and equipment required for the development of proliferation-sensitive parts of the nuclear fuel cycle. Although the independent strengths of international safeguards and export controls rely largely on universal adherence, there may be opportunities to exploit the shared strengths of these systems. This article provides background information on the separate evolution of export controls and international safeguards, considers how these two elements of the nonproliferation regime interact, and identifies some possible avenues that could, over time, lead to wholly integrated activities.
Revised: April 6, 2010 |
Published: November 3, 2008
Citation
Peterson D.J., R. Goorevich, R. Hooper, L. Scheinman, and J.W. Tape. 2008.Export Controls and International Safeguards: Strengthening Nonproliferation through Interdisciplinary Integration.The Nonproliferation Review 15, no. 3:515-527.PNNL-SA-61828.doi:10.1080/10736700802407168