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Ward Wilson

American nuclear disarmament researcher From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Ward Hayes Wilson (born April 26, 1956) is an American researcher who is the executive director of RealistRevolt, a grassroots advocacy organization in the Chicago area. He lives and works in Glenview, Illinois.

Career

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Ward Hayes Wilson is a writer at “the forefront” of debates about the value and utility of nuclear weapons and nuclear deterrence.[1][2][3][4] He has been a senior fellow at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, BASIC (the British American Security Information Council), and the Federation of American Scientists.[5]

Wilson is best known for his argument that the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki did not force Japan's surrender at the end of World War II.[6] Winner of the $10,000 Doreen and Jim McElvany Nonproliferation Challenge in 2008,[7] Wilson uses realist arguments to challenge existing ideas about nuclear weapons. His arguments have appeared in anti-nuclear journals he Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists[8] and Nonproliferation Review,[9] in military journals Joint Force Quarterly [10] and Parameters,[11] in foreign policy journals Foreign Policy [12] and International Security,[13] and in the New York Times,[14] the Los Angeles Times,[15] and The Nation.[16]

Wilson received a grant in 2010 to write, travel, and speak on nuclear weapons issues.[17] He presented arguments that challenge accepted ideas about nuclear weapons in 23 countries including at the Pentagon; the French National Assembly; the United Nations; the Scottish National Parliament; the U.S. State Department; Harvard; Stanford; Princeton; Georgetown; Yale; the Sorbonne; the U.S. Naval War College; King's College London; Hamburg University; Nagasaki University; University of Pretoria; the Mexican Foreign Ministry; the Belgian Parliament; the National Assembly of Costa Rica; Aberystwyth University, Wales; and Chatham House, London[18]

Wilson launched his book Five Myths About Nuclear Weapons at an event at the United Nations in February 2013.[19] He launched his second book It Is Possible: A Future Without Nuclear Weapons at the United Nations in 2023.[20]

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Awards and honors

  • RFK Fellow, The Robert Kennedy Memorial Foundation, 1981.[21]
  • Doreen and Jim McElvaney Prize, which included a $10,000 award for the best essay on nuclear weapons worldwide in 2008.[22]

Publications

See also

References

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