Bibtex export

 

@book{ Schöring2017,
 title = {Preserve Past Achievements: why Drones Should Stay within the Missile Technology Control Regime (for the Time Being)},
 author = {Schöring, Niklas},
 year = {2017},
 series = {PRIF Reports},
 pages = {27},
 volume = {149},
 address = {Frankfurt am Main},
 publisher = {Hessische Stiftung Friedens- und Konfliktforschung},
 isbn = {978-3-946459-27-9},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-59496-4},
 abstract = {There are quite few relevant inter­national regimes con­trol­ling the sale and use of drones. The MTCR (Missile Tech­nology Control Regime), originally set up to re­gulate the pro­li­feration of Weapons of Mass Destruc­tion missile de­livery systems, is widely con­sidered the main in­stru­ment for limit­ing the pro­li­feration of UAVs (un­manned aerial vehicles). In 2017, the MTCR turned 30 and calls are being made for the MTCR to focus solely on "trad­itional" rockets, missiles and cruise missiles because in its current for­mu­lation it too strongly curbs the sale of UAVs. Schörnig warns against hollow­ing out the MTCR without re­placing it with a new and broader re­gime and re­commends safe­guarding the arms-control norms embedded within the MTCR.},
 keywords = {Rüstungskontrolle; arms control; Sicherheitspolitik; security policy; Rüstung; armaments; Massenvernichtungswaffe; weapon of mass destruction; Waffe; weapon}}