SIPRI Yearbook 2011
You need to buy a copy of the print edition to see full content; find out more. If you have already bought the print edition, please log in to see full content.
Contents
SIPRI Yearbook 2011- SIPRI Yearbook 2011: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Abstracts
- Abbreviations and conventions
- Introduction
- 1. Corruption and the arms trade: sins of commission
- 2. Resources and armed conflict
- I. Introduction
- II. Current thinking on resource–conflict links
- III. Economic approaches to conflict
- IV. Environmental approaches to conflict
- V. The resource geopolitics approach
- VI. Conclusions: the challenges of cooperative resource governance
- Appendix 2A. Patterns of major armed conflicts, 2001–10
- Appendix 2B. The Global Peace Index 2011
- 3. Peace operations: the fragile consensus
- 4. Military expenditure
- 5. Arms production
- I. Introduction
- II. Developments in the arms industry, 2009–10
- III. Motivations, barriers and capability in arms production
- IV. The Israeli arms industry
- V. The South Korean arms industry
- VI. The Turkish arms industry
- VII. Conclusions
- Appendix 5A. The SIPRI Top 100 arms-producing companies, 2009
- Appendix 5B. Major arms industry acquisitions, 2010
- 6. International arms transfers
- I. Introduction
- II. Major arms suppliers: the United States and Russia
- III. Arms transfers to India and Pakistan
- IV. Exports from the European Union to countries in conflict
- V. Conclusions
- Appendix 6A. The suppliers and recipients of major conventional weapons, 2006–10
- Appendix 6B. The financial value of states’ arms exports, 2000–2009
- Appendix 6C. Transparency in arms transfers
- 7. World nuclear forces
- I. Introduction
- II. US nuclear forces
- III. Russian nuclear forces
- IV. British nuclear forces
- V. French nuclear forces
- VI. Chinese nuclear forces
- VII. Indian nuclear forces
- VIII. Pakistani nuclear forces
- IX. Israeli nuclear forces
- X. North Korea’s military nuclear capabilities
- XI. Conclusions
- Appendix 7A. Global stocks and production of fissile materials, 2010
- 8. Nuclear arms control and non-proliferation
- 9. Reducing security threats from chemical and biological materials
- 10. Conventional arms control and military confidence building
- 11. Strategic trade controls: countering the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction
- Annex A. Arms control and disarmament agreements
- Annex B. International security cooperation bodies
- Annex C. Chronology 2010
- About the authors
- Errata