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International arms transfers

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SIPRI researchers have been monitoring and measuring international arms transfers since 1968, reporting their findings in the SIPRI Arms Transfers Database, the SIPRI Yearbook and other publications. Research has been and is conducted on:
  • The financial value of the international arms trade, which can be found under the heading ‘Measuring international arms transfers’. This information is also made available in the SIPRI Yearbook;
  • International, regional and national mechanisms for reporting on international arms transfers. Under the heading ‘Transparency in international arms transfers’ one is introduced to the UN Register of Conventional Arms, EU Annual Reports on arms exports and national reports on arms transfers; and
  • Research on existing and potential global and regional instruments for controlling and guiding national decisions on arms transfers. Under the heading ‘Controlling international arms transfers’, one can find details of SIPRI’s research on international arms embargoes, the Arms Trade Treaty and the EU Code of Conduct and Common Rules.  
  • SIPRI also provides two databases on arms transfers: the Arms Transfer Database and the Arms Embargo Database.

For information on these research areas as well as for publications, research projects and presentations by SIPRI researchers on international arms transfers please refer to the link section on the left. Direct links to the databases and externally funded grants can be found on the right. Below a number of recent publications and activities are made available. For older publications please visit the arms transfer publications section.
Recent publications

The International Arms Trade: Difficult to Define, Measure, and Control

Paul Holtom and Mark Bromley
Arms Control Today
July/August 2010
Accessible here

Nothing to report: The lost promise of the UN Register of Conventional Arms

Paul Holtom
Contemporary Security Policy, vol. 31, no. 1, pp. 61-87
April 2010

Russian arms transfers to North Africa: Fuelling an arms race?

Paul Holtom
RIA-Novosti
15 March 2010
Available here.

End-User Certificates: Improving Standards to Prevent Diversion

Mark Bromley and Hugh Griffiths
SIPRI Insights on Peace and Security no. 2010/3
March 2010
Available here.

Arms Transfers to Europe and Central Asia

Paul Holtom
SIPRI Background Paper
February 2010
Available here.

Arms transfers to East and Southern Africa

Pieter D. Wezeman
SIPRI Background Paper
December 2009
Available here.

Arms transfers to Asia and Oceania

Siemon T. Wezeman
SIPRI Background Paper
October 2009
Available here.

Arms transfers to the conflict in Chad

Pieter D. Wezeman
SIPRI Background Paper
August 2009
Available
here.

Arms transfers to the Middle East

Sam Perlo-Freeman
SIPRI Background Paper
July 2009
Available here.

































Recent Activities
July 29, Stockholm

ICCEES VIII World Congress 2010

Director of SIPRI Arms Transfers Programme, Paul Holtom, gave a presentation on ‘Russian arms transfers to China’ on 29 July 2010 during the ICCEES VIII World Congress 'Eurasia: Prospects for Wider Cooperation' in Stockholm. The presentation addressed recent trends in Russian arms transfers to China and Russian concerns relating to copying and competition with China on the international arms market. For more information on the the ICCEES VIII World Congress 'Eurasia: Prospects for Wider Cooperation' visit: http://www.iccees2010.se/. Contact Dr. Paul Holtom for more information.

15 July 2010, New York

Seminar ‘Reporting on conventional arms transfers’

Director of SIPRI Arms Transfers Programme, Paul Holtom, gave a presentation on ‘Reporting on conventional arms transfers’ at a side-event in the context of discussing an ATT on the UN Register of Conventional Arms, during the first Arms Trade Treaty Preparatory Committee. The side-event was organised by the United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs (UNODA). The session discussed trends in reporting to the UN Register, questions regarding the relevance of the Register and potential lessons for discussions towards an Arms Trade Treaty.
Contact Dr. Paul Holtom for more information.

July 5, The Hague

Seminar 'The Possibilities of an International Arms Trade Treaty

SIPRI senior fellow Siemon T. Wezeman participated in a seminar hosted by Clingendael and the Dutch MoFA on 'The possibilities of an International ATT' on Monday 5 July 2010 in The Hague (NL). He gave a presentation on recent trends in arms transfers and commented, based on experiences with past trade, on the needs for as well as problems and opportunities of an ATT. Contact Siemon T. Wezeman for more information.

Jun 29-30, Cairo

Symposium ‘Towards an Arms Trade Treaty’

Director of SIPRI Arms Transfers Programme, Paul Holtom, gave a presentation on ‘An ATT and the UN Register of Conventional Arms’ at the symposium ‘Towards an Arms Trade Treaty’, which was co-organised by the League of Arab States and the UN Institute of Disarmament Research (UNIDIR). The symposium examined the views and opinions of Arab States with regard to discussions on an ATT and also facilitated an exchange of views between League of Arab States members and international experts.
Contact Dr. Paul Holtom for more information.

Jun 15-16, Sarajevo

Regional Seminar on Arms Export Control

SIPRI Researcher Mark Bromley attended a Regional Seminar on Arms Export Control in Sarajevo. The seminar was funded by the European Union and organized by the German Federal Office of Economics and Export Control (BAFA) in cooperation with the government of Bosnia and Herzegovina and focussed on implementing the EU Common Position defining common rules governing the control of exports of military technology and equipment. Mark gave a presentation on implementing the criteria of the Common Position. Contact Mark Bromley for more information.

Jun 3, Washington D.C.

An Arms Race in Our Hemisphere? Discussing the Trends and Implications of Military Expenditures in South America

SIPRI Researcher, Mark Bromley, spoke at an event entitled 'An Arms Race in Our Hemisphere? Discussing the Trends and Implications of Military Expenditures in South America'. Co-organised by the Brookings Institute and the Center for Hemispheric Defense Studies, the event examined the drivers behind the recent increases in arms acquisitions and military spending in South America and the potential implications for regional security and US foreign policy. For details of the event, click here. Contact Mark Bromley for more information.

 

Older activities can be accessed here.
Internships with the arms transfer project

Click here for information

Staff
SIPRI Arms Transfers Database

Enter the database

SIPRI Arms Embargoes Database

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