A Say in the End of the World: Morals and British Nuclear Weapons Policy 1941-1987

A Say in the End of the World: Morals and British Nuclear Weapons Policy 1941-1987

by RogerRuston (Author)

Synopsis

More than forty years of commitment to nuclear weapons may have prepared Britain to take part in Armageddon, but not to defend itself against attack. What made British governments choose this path and how have they justified it? How have they responded to the moral questions it raises? Using material from recently-released official documents, Roger Ruston presents a moral history of British defence policy, from the 'lesson' of Appeasement to the nuclear modernizations of the eighties, and answers many of the questions that governments have avoided. The book will be of great interest to defence historians, moralists, politicians, and general readers who need a clear account of their country's defence predicament as a basis from which to devise workable and morally acceptable alternatives.

$201.06

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Publisher: Clarendon Press
Published: 10 Aug 1989

ISBN 10: 019827565X
ISBN 13: 9780198275657

Media Reviews
'an absorbing account of British nuclear weapons policy ... All those concerned about nuclear weapons will benefit enormously from reading this book.' Labour Research
'it is rare that a thesis so tightly argued should be so very readable ... a truly excellent book' Owen Hardwicke, Sanity
'It is clearly, concisely and cogently written and is the only book which analyses the course of the British nuclear debate through the forty-six year period.' Month
'The book has been carefully researched.' Day by Day
Author Bio
former Lecturer in Ethics and Moral Theology at Blackfriars, Oxford.