UNODA Occasional Papers

The UNODA Occasional Papers series has been developed to give wider dissemination of input from expert panels and seminars sponsored by the United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs (UNODA). The series also features papers that deal with topical issues in the field of arms limitation, disarmament and international security.

  • No. 41, December 2023
    Celebrating 45 years of the Secretary-General’s Advisory Board on Disarmament Matters: Creative, inclusive, and cooperative diplomacy at work
  • No. 40, July 2023
    The United Nations and Disarmament amid COVID-19: Adaptation and Continuity
  • No. 39, April 2023
    The Global Reported Arms Trade: Transparency in Armaments Through the United Nations Register of Conventional Arms
  • No. 38, May 2021
    Advancing the Process to Negotiate a Fissile Material Cut-Off Treaty: The Role of States in the African, Asia-Pacific and Latin American and Caribbean Regions
  • No. 34, November 2019
    The Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention: 20 Years of Saving Lives and Preventing Indiscriminate Harm
  • No. 29, October 2016
    Bringing Democracy to Disarmament: A Historical Perspective on the Special Sessions of the General Assembly Devoted to Disarmament
  • No. 24, December 2013
    Contrasting Perspectives on Tactical Nuclear Weapons in Europe: Understanding the Current Debates
  • No. 23, March 2013
    The Impact of Poorly Regulated Arms Transfers on the Work of the United Nations
  • No. 21, December 2011
    Study on the Development of a Framework for Improving End-Use and End-User Control Systems
  • No. 13, December 2007
    United Nations Seminar on Implementing UN Security Council Resolution 1540 in Latin America and the Caribbean
  • No. 12, May 2007
    United Nations Seminar on Implementing UN Security Council Resolution 1540 in Africa
  • No. 11, October 2006
    United Nations Seminar on Implementing UN Security Council Resolution 1540 in Asia and the Pacific
  • No. 1, July 1999
    Towards a world free from nuclear weapons: Why South Africa gave up the nuclear option