1. Hedley Bull, The Control of the Arms Race: Disarmament and Arms Control in the Missile Age (New York: Praeger, 1961), p. xiv (emphasis added).
2. For an analysis which brings together aspects of the pre- and post-1945 experience of arms control, see Colin Gray, House of Cards: Why Arms Control Must Fail (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1992); for a descriptive survey of selected pre-1945 arms control agreements, see Goldblat, Arms Control.
3. For two useful overviews of superpower arms control during the Cold War, see John Newhouse, The Nuclear Age: From Hiroshima to Star Wars (New York: Penguin, 1989) and
4. April Carter, Success and Failure in Arms Control Negotiations (Oxford: Oxford University Press/SIPRI, 1989).
5. For a discussion of the differences between arms control and disarmament as they appeared during the Cold War, see Ken Booth, ‘Disarmament and Arms Control’, in John Baylis et al., Contemporary Strategy: Theories and Concepts (London: Holmes and Meier, 1987).