Forgotten Among the Cheering
Erika Simpson, Special to QMI Agency; April 4, 2014
Canadian Pugwash members were among speakers at “Nuclear Weapons Past and Present”
March 30, 2014, sponsored by the Bill Graham Centre, University of Toronto:
Ramesh Thakur -The Problem of Nuclear Weapons and What To Do About It
Adele Buckley – Arctic Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone, Current Proposals
Ernie Regehr – Situational maritime awareness toward an Arctic Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone
Arctic patrol vessels: military or civilian, combat or constabulary roles?
Does Canada Need a Department of Peace?
Good News Service #28: Early Fall 2013
- Why Sharing News About Solutions Is A Revolutionary Act
- Huge Increases In Production And Use Of Renewable Energy
- Ten Million Indian Families Take Part In 100,000 Forest Management Groups ; 200 Million Trees Grown In Niger
- US, Russia Reach Agreement To Secure Syria’s Chemical Weapons
- Open Ended Working Group Seeks To End The Paralysis Of Disarmament Initiatives
- Archbishop Tutu And The Dalai Lama: Are They Just “Two Naughty Schoolboys” Hanging Out Together?
- Women Nobel Peace Laureates Urge Military Spending Cuts
- Cape Takes On Lawn Pesticides And Wins First Round
- Amnesty International Speaking Out For Justice In Africa
- Pakistani Teenager At The UN: “One Pen Can Change The World”
- Avaaz: Grassroots Network Claims 24 Million Support Base In 18 Countries And Operates In 17 Languages
- Iran Could Be A Surprise Moderate In Middle East Talks
Download the full issue here (docx)
Statement of the Pugwash Council
Statement of the Pugwash Council, Berlin, 5 July 2011. […] The 59th Pugwash Conference was attended by Adele Buckley and Peter Jones, and by Canadian Pugwash members Pierre Jasmin, Ernie Regehr, Erika Simpson and CSYP member Cameron Harrington.
GIP Prospectus
Prospectus revised for the Global Issues Project (06/08/2010). Read here.
en français
Canadian Pugwash plans to continue enlarging the French language section of the website, and welcomes new material written by or about any member of Pugwash.
Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech
For more than forty years the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs have been working for the control reduction, and eventual elimination of nuclear weapons. It was in recognition of these efforts that Pugwash, together with its President, Joseph Rotblat, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1995.
View the acceptance speech below.