Earlier this month, after decades of work, the United Nations adopted a nuclear weapons ban treaty – to little fanfare, particularly in Australia which boycotted the process.
The treaty and how it was delivered intersects with global social, health and environmental policy and advocacy, beyond seeking to address the acute existential threat of nuclear weapons to humanity.
Associate Professor Tilman Ruff, the founding chair of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), examines the process and implications of its adoption.
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