Among the various national and transnational groupings working against nuclear war, the Pugwash movement stands out. Even today, it evokes the July 1955 manifesto that was drafted by Bertrand Russell and co-signed by Albert Einstein just before his death. The movement took its name from the location of its first meeting, in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia in summer 1957. To date, the history of the Pugwash movement has been told largely through chronological accounts, memoirs and partial studies of national Pugwash groups. Writing a comprehensive history of the movement is perhaps not possible at the present time. On the one hand, the informal structure of the Pugwash movement means it is known only to a relatively small audience, and has attracted little attention from historians even since the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to the movement and its secretary general, Joseph Rotblat, in 1995. On the other, although the Pugwash movement has an international presence, it is embedded in very different scientific, social and political configurations in different countries and regions. As a result, it seems neither possible nor desirable to write a single, unified narrative of the movement's peace-policy successes and global political significance. Instead, what we need are multi-faceted histories written from a range of distinct national and regional perspectives. Only in this way will historians be able to fully understand the distinctive character of the Pugwash movement in the long term, its survival through time and across such profound political changes and its contributions to international dialogue. From its inception, Pugwash oscillated between an elitist claim to universal scientific expertise, links with transnational movements for peace and against nuclear weapons, and integration into the local political establishments. It therefore offers an outstanding opportunity to consider national and international connections between science and politics, which became increasingly complex during the second half of the twentieth century. Analysing these interrelations from a transnational perspective necessitates a large, cooperative network of historians, able to take a range of different thematic and regional approaches. Workshop 10 – 12 May, 2012 Convenors: Silke Fengler and Carola Sachse (Department of Contemporary History, University of Vienna, Austria) Alison Kraft (Egenis, University of Exeter, UK) Holger Nehring (University of Sheffield, Arbeitskreis Historische Friedensforschung) Venue: Albert Schweitzer Haus, Kappellenraum, Schwarzspanierstraße 13, 1090 Vienna, Austria Workshop Programme: Thursday, 10 May 2012 13:30 REGISTRATION 14:00 Welcome Addresses 14:00-14:10 Carola Sachse (Vienna, Austria) 14:10-14:20 Holger Nehring (Sheffield, UK) 14:20-14:50 Paolo Cotta-Ramusino “Pugwash: From Hiroshima and Nagasaki to Kabul and Gaza” (Pugwash Secretary General, Rome, Italy) 15:00 – 17:00 Panel 1 Early History of the Pugwash Movement Chair: Reiner Braun (Berlin, Germany) Commentator: Sandra Ionno Butcher (London, UK) Christoph Laucht (Leeds, UK) A Prelude to Pugwash: The Atomic Scientists’ Association and the British Origins of the Pugwash Movement Geoffrey Roberts (Cork, Ireland) The Communist Peace Movement and the Origins of Pugwash, 1948-1956 Elisabeth Röhrlich (Vienna, Austria) Communists, Radicals, and Conservatives: The Pugwash Movement and the Scientific Mega Events of 1958 17:00 – 18:00 Coffee break 18:00 Moderation Carola Sachse (Vienna, Austria) Keynote: Matthew Evangelista (Cornell University, NY, USA) “How Scientists Helped End the Cold War: Approaches to "Pugwash History" 20:00 Reception Friday Morning, 11 May 2012 9:00 – 11:00 Panel 2 Biographies Chair: Gerhard Botz (Vienna, Austria) Commentator: Ulrich Bartosch (Berlin, Germany) Andrew Brown (Manchester, NH, USA) The Biographical Approach to Pugwash History Lodovica Clavarino (Rome, Italy) An Italian Pugwash History: Amaldi´s Pacifist Choice Based on Pragmatism and Optimism Gordon Barrett (Bristol, UK) Zhou Peiyuan, the Pugwash Conferences and the Politics of Science in the People’s Republic of China, 1957-1964 11:00 – 11:30 Coffee Break 11:30 – 13:00 Panel 3 Country-Specific Topics I Chair: Oliver Rathkolb (Vienna, Austria) Commentator: Mitchell G. Ash (Vienna, Austria) Akira Kurosaki (Fukushima, Japan) Japanese Scientists' Critique of Nuclear Deterrence and Pugwash, 1954-1964 Julia Kleinschmidt (Göttingen, Germany) The Politics of Science – Or: Struggling with the Past: German Scientists and the Founding Fathers of the Pugwash Movement 13:00 – 15:00 Lunch Break Friday Afternoon, 11 May 2012 15:00 – 17:00 Panel 4 Country-specific Topics II Chair: Holger Nehring (Sheffield, UK) Commentator: Kristine C. Harper (Tallahassee, FL, USA) Doubravka Olšáková (Prague, Czech Republic) “We are not going to Moscow!” The Czechoslovak Pugwash Movement and Soviet Interests Jahnavi Phalkey (London, UK) Science and the Global Politics of Peace in Cold War India Ronald E. Doel (Tallahassee, FL, USA) The Pugwash Movement and U.S. Debates over Scientific Internationalism: Strategic Perceptions from the White House Saturday Morning, 12 May 2012 9:00 – 11:00 Panel 5 Country-Specific Topics III Chair: Walter Kutschera (Vienna, Austria) Commentator: Michael Eckert (Munich, Germany) Alison Kraft (Exeter, UK) Pugwash and the Politics of Fallout: A British Perspective Silke Fengler (Vienna, Austria) Honest Brokers: The Pugwash Movement in Cold War Austria Carola Sachse (Vienna, Austria) The Max Planck Society and Pugwash: An Uneasy Relationship? 11:00 – 11:30 Coffee Break 11:30 – 12:15 Conclusions and Open Questions Commentator: John Krige (Atlanta, GA, USA) Commentator: Holger Nehring (Sheffield, UK) 12:15 – 13:30 Final Session “Looking Forward: Challenges for Future Histories and Establishing A Pugwash Histories Network“ Sandra Ionno Butcher in conversation with Paolo Cotta-Ramusino 13:30 End of Workshop