Almost the entire southern hemisphere is now covered by nuclear-weapon-free zones. The ones in Latin America and the South Pacific were established during the Cold War, those in Southeast Asia and Africa after its ending. Zones have also been proposed, so far without success, for the Middle East, South Asia and Northeast Asia. In this book, analysts from within the respective regions explore the reasons for success and failure in the establishment of the zone, and their utility and limitations as stepping stones to a nuclear-weapon-free world.Notes on Contributors Abbreviations PART ONE: INTRODUCTION Stepping Stones to a Nuclear-Weapon-Free World; R.Thakur PART TWO: THE FOUR ESTABLISHED ZONES Latin America: the Treaty of Tlatelolco; M.Serrano The South Pacific: the Treaty of Rarotonga; M.Hamel-Green Southeast Asia: the Treaty of Bangkok; C.G.Hernandez Africa: the Treaty of Pelindaba; J.O.Ihonvbere PART THREE: FOUR PROSPECTIVE ZONES A Northeast Asian Nuclear-Weapon-Free-Zone: A Korean Perspective; B.Koo A Northeast Asian Nuclear-Weapon-Free-Zone: A Japanese Perspective; N.Sajima The Case for a South Asian Nuclear-Weapon-Free-Zone; S.Yasmeen The Obstacles to a South Asian Nuclear-Weapon-Free-Zone; D.Banerjee The Case For a Nuclear-Weapon-Free-Zone in the Middle East; I.A.Karawan The Obstacles to a Middle East Nuclear-Weapon-Free-Zone in the Middle East; G.M.Steinberg A Nuclear-Weapon-Free Southern Hemisphere; T.O'Brien IndexDIPANKAR BANERJEE AVSM, formerly Deputy Director of the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses, New Delhi.MICHAEL HAMEL-GREEN Associate Professor in the Department of Social and Community Studies at Victoria University of Technology in MelbourneCAROLINA G. HERNANDEZ Professor of International Relations at the University of the Philippines and President of the Institute for Strategic and Development Studies in ManilaJULIUS O. IHONVBERE Program Officer in the Peace and Social Justice Program of the Ford Foundation in New YorkIBRAHIM A. KARAWAN AslĂ"