
Sources for the International Peace Movement:
Documents: - Document Collection, "The Atomic Bomb and the End of World War II," (September 30, 1944 - September 14, 1945) ed. By William Burr (National Security Archive, 2007)
- Document Collection, "The Making of the Limited Test Ban Treaty, 1958-1963," (May 1954 - August 19, 1963) ed. by William Burr and Hector L. Montford (National Security Archiv, 2003)
- Bertrand Russell and Albert Einstein, "Manifesto," (July 9, 1955)
- "How sane the SANE?," Time Magazine (April 21, 1958)
- BBC report on CND Aldermaston March (April 18, 1960)
- "Pacifism by the Numbers," Time Magazine (April 14, 1961)
- "Aldermaston's Amen?," Time Magazine (April 26, 1963)
- "Limited Test Ban Treaty," (August 5, 1963)
- War Resisters' International, "Training in Nonviolence," booklet based on the proceedings of the War Resisters' International 1965 Study Conference on Training in Non-Violence held in Perugia, Italy, August 13-20.
- Document Collection, "The Secret History of the ABM Treaty, 1969-1972," (May 23, 1969 - June 10, 1972) ed. by William Burr (National Security Archive, 2001)
- George Lakey, "A Manifesto for a Nonviolent Revolution," paper draft for 24th War Resisters' International Triennial, Sheffield, England, 1972.
Videos Online:
- Interview, "Storm in a Teacup": Sir Roger Makins, later Lord Sherfield, the British ambassador to the United States from 1953 to 1956 and chairman of the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority from 1970 to 1992, recalls the European outcry when U.S. president Harry S. Truman was considering using the atomic bomb against the Chinese in the Korean conflict. (Open Vault)
- Interview, "Diplomatic Standing and the Bomb": Maurice Schumann, French deputy foreign minister from 1951 to 1954 and foreign minister from 1969 to 1973, recalls his realization that France's acquisition of the atomic bomb had, in the eyes of the world, restored its "rank and prestige." (Open Vault)
- Interview, "Raising the Nuclear Threshold": Robert McNamara, U.S. Secretary of Defense from 1961 to 1968, recalls how he rejected the doctrine of "massive retaliation" in favor of "flexible response" in order to raise the nuclear threshold and increase the United States' ability to wage limited nuclear and non-nuclear warfare. (Open Vault)
- News Report on Aldermaston March, ITN News At Ten, 15 April, 1968
- Universal Newsreel, "Anti-War March, April 18, 1967"
- "Cold War Culture: The Nuclear Fear of the 1950s and 1960s," CBC
Related Websites: - Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, "A Brief History of CND"
- Peace Action
- War Resisters' International
- Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) / History
- Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs
- A.J. Muste Memorial Institute
- "Linus Pauling and the International Peace Movement," Online Exhibition, Oregon State University
- "The International Peace Movement," The Peace Palace Library Centennial Exhibition, Carnegie Foundation
- Documentary British Film Institute, "The March to Aldermaston" (1959), includes production stills.
- The Pacifica Radio/UC Berkeley Social Activism Sound Recording Project, "Anti-Vietnam War Protests in the San Francisco Bay Area & Beyond"
Related Articles:
- Samantha Carroll, "'I was arrested at Greenham in 1962': Investigating the Oral Narratives of Women in the Committee of 100," Oral History 32 (Spring 2004) / Project's Website
- Lawrence Wittner, "An Anniversary to Celebrate If You Oppose War," History News Network (October 1, 2007), at the 50th anniversary of Peace Action which originated with the National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy (SANE)
- Sandra Ionno Butcher, "The Origins of the Russell-Einstein Manifesto," Pugwash History Series 1, May 2005

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