Michal Onderčo's book Europe’s Nuclear Umbrella describes the collapse of key arms control treaties between great powers since the mid-2010s, which has has unravelled the post–Cold War security architecture in Europe, heightening nuclear risks to the continent. At the same time, a fresh movement emerged, calling for the total abolition of nuclear weapons, due to their catastrophic humanitarian consequences. European policy-makers found themselves between a rock and a hard place – between the global strategic conundrum calling for growing attention to nuclear deterrence, and domestic audiences demanding just the opposite. Europe's Nuclear Umbrella is about how they navigated this balance. Building on combined insights from public administration, comparative politics, foreign policy analysis, and international relations, Michal Onderčo offers a novel theory which reflects the complexity of democratic foreign policy-making in the twenty-first century.
Source: Cambridge University Press

