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Dr Tanya Ogilvie-White

Dr Tanya Ogilvie-White

 

Consulting Fellow, Non-Proliferation and Disarmament Programme


Expertise:
Nuclear proliferation; disarmament dynamics; nuclear and radiological security; the nuclear non-proliferation regime; the expansion of nuclear energy; global and regional (especially Asia-Pacific) security-building.


Background: Dr. Tanya Ogilvie-White joined IISS in June 2010 on a one-year research fellowship, funded by the Stanton Nuclear Security Program. As part of the IISS Nonproliferation and Disarmament group, she  led the Michael Quinlan Project, editing a book of Sir Michael Quinlan’s correspondence on nuclear deterrence.  Following the conclusion of her fellowship, she returned to her position as Senior Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Canterbury, New Zealand, which she has held since 2003. She has continued her affiliation with the IISS as a Consulting Fellow. She is a member of the Council on Security Cooperation in the Asia Pacific (CSCAP), and Associate Editor of the U.S.-based journal, Asian Security.  
 

Joined IISS: June 2010

 

Contact: Click here to email Tanya Ogilvie-White

 

 Recent and Forthcoming Publications

  •  On Nuclear Deterrence: The Correspondence of Sir Michael Quinlan (London, International Institute for Strategic Studies, 2011)

  • “Nuclear Intelligence and North-South Politics,” International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence (March 2011)

  • (with David Santoro) (eds.), Disarmament Diplomacy in Action (University of Georgia Press, 2011).

  • (with Jack Boureston), Seeking Nuclear Security Through Greater International Coordination (New York:Council on Foreign Relations, March 2010).

  •  “The Defiant States: The Nuclear Diplomacy of North Korea and Iran,”The Nonproliferation Review 17, 1 (2010), pp. 115-138.

  • (with David Santoro) (eds), Special Section: The Dynamics of Nuclear Disarmament: New Momentum and the Future of the Nonproliferation Regime, The Nonproliferation Review 17, 1 (2010).

  • (with Natasha Barnes and Rodrigo Alvarez), “The Holdout States: Universality as an Elusive Goal,” The Nonproliferation Review 17, 1 (2010), pp. 95-113.

  • Chapter 10: “Thailand” and Chapter 11: “Vietnam”,in Mark Fitzpatrick (ed.), Preventing Nuclear Dangers in Southeast Asia and Australasia (London: International Institute for Strategic Studies, 2009).

  • (with Michael S. Malley), “Nuclear Capabilities in Southeast Asia: Building a Preventive Proliferation Firewall,” The Nonproliferation Review 16, 1 (2009), pp. 25-45.