Resource List

Speech by Dr. Jennifer Allen Simons

On her retirement as Executive Director of the Simons Centre for Disarmament and Non-Proliferation Research

Liu Institute for Global Issues, The University of British Columbia
April 22, 2005

Report of the International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty

2001

 

The so-called “right of humanitarian intervention” has been one of the most controversial foreign policy issues of the last decade – both when intervention has happened, as in Kosovo, and when it has failed to happen, as in Rwanda. 

UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, in his report to the 2000 Millennium Assembly, challenged the international community to try to forge consensus, once and for all, around the basic questions of principle and process involved: when should intervention occur, under whose authority, and how.  The independent International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty was established by the Canadian Government in September 2000 to respond to that challenge. 

Its report’s central theme is the idea of “The Responsibility to Protect.”  Sovereign states have a responsibility to protect their own citizens from avoidable catastrophe – from mass murder and rape, from starvation – but when they are unwilling or unable to do so, that responsibility must be borne by the broader community of states.

Report of the Consultation on NATO Nuclear Policy, National Missile Defence, and Alternative Security Arrangements
Ottawa, Canada
September 28-30, 2000

The global threat posed by the existence of nuclear weapons certainly did not disappear with the end of the Cold War. Nevertheless, in the past decade we have seen a welcome surge in both the support for and the expectation of real progress toward the elimination of nuclear weapons. At the same time, there have been many developments – the defeat of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty in the US Senate, the nuclearization of South Asia, the retention of Cold-War-era nuclear postures by the United States and Russia – that tend in the opposite direction: towards the indefinite retention and even the spread of nuclear capabilities. The looming prospect of missile defence deployment threatens further damage to nuclear arms control and disarmament efforts. And thus the opportunity that now exists to make dramatic advances towards complete nuclear disarmament is at risk of being lost.

In September 2000, The Simons Foundation in partnership with Project Ploughshares convened a Consultation on NATO Nuclear Policy, National Missile Defence, and Alternative Security Arrangements. The Consultation brought together civil society experts, Canadian government officials, and a number of representatives of other countries to discuss the key nuclear weapons issues facing Canada and the North Atlantic community and to explore and articulate proposals in support of nuclear disarmament and alternative security arrangements. The purpose of the Consultation was to identify and build support for Canadian initiatives to advance nuclear disarmament and alternative security arrangements, globally and in the NATO context  (see Appendix 1 for a list of participants).

The opening, context-setting, address to the Consultation was given by Jennifer Allen Simons and is included as the Introduction to this report. The Consultation then proceeded to focus on six main topics: Status of the NATO Review, Nuclear Arms Control and Disarmament Priorities, Implications of National Missile Defence, Deterrence and Assurance Strategies, Post-Nuclear Security Arrangements, and Directions for Canadian Policy (see Appendix 2 for the Consultation Agenda).

The main body of this report is presented as a joint Policy Brief by The Simons Foundation and Project Ploughshares that draws on key points and recommendations discussed at the Consultation and raised in papers submitted beforehand by the participants (see www.ploughshares.ca). We believe these views are broadly representative of those expressed by the majority of Consultation participants, but this report is not intended to and does not represent the views of all participants on all subjects.

Speech by Dr. Jennifer Allen Simons

Valuing The Culture of Peace Conference

Victoria, B.C.
August 9th-11th, 2000

Strategy Consultation
Vancouver, Canada
October 28-29, 1999

The Way Forward: Developing Legal and Political Strategies to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, the Strategy Consultation convened by The Simons Foundation in partnership with The Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, Project Ploughshares and Simon Fraser University, in Vancouver, B.C. on October 28–29th, 1999, emerged from Dr. Jennifer Allen Simons' concern about the nuclear dangers to the world and its people.

The Simons Foundation Award for Distinguished Global Leadership in the Service of Peace and Disarmament
Award Presentation
Dinner in honour of the Hon. Lloyd Axworthy, PC, OC, OM, Ph.D.
Fairmont Waterfront Hotel
Vancouver, Canada
October 29, 1999