Sidra Hamidi is Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at Trinity College in Hartford. Her articles have appeared in the European Journal of International Relations and International Affairs, and she is a recipient of the McElvany grand prize for exceptional scholarship published in the Nonproliferation Review.
'For those who think that the answer to the question 'What is a nuclear state?' is obvious, Sidra Hamidi opens up a much more complex nuclear world in which the relationship between technical capabilities and nuclear status is always in negotiation. After Fission is a smart, compelling, carefully-researched account of nuclear meaning-making. From the liminal spaces within the nuclear order occupied by India, Iran, Israel, and North Korea, Hamidi shows us how the contested politics of recognition reveal the tenuousness of taken-for-granted categories, and why that matters for international diplomacy. This theoretically-rich and empirically-grounded analysis will be of value to both scholars and policy-makers.' Shampa Biswas, Judge & Mrs. Timothy A. Paul Chair of Political Science, Whitman College 'Why, how, and when do countries declare themselves to be 'nuclear' or 'non-nuclear' states? The answer, Hamidi argues, requires disentangling status from capability. After Fission's groundbreaking analysis will enable political scientists to get out of the long rut that has plagued their approach to the nuclear world.' Gabrielle Hecht, Professor of History, Stanford University