Douglas Roche
DOUGLAS ROCHE was Canada's Ambassador for Disarmament to the UN from 1984 to 1989, serving as Chairman of the UN Disarmament Committee in 1988. He is an author, parliamentarian, and diplomat, who has specialized throughout his forty-year public career in peace and human security issues. He lectures widely on peace and nuclear disarmament themes. Roche is the author of twenty-one books, including How We Stopped Loving the Bomb and The Human Right to Peace. He is an Officer of the Order of Canada. He lives in Edmonton.
The United Nations in the 21st CenturyGrappling with the world's most challenging issues: militarism, the environment, human rights, inequalityBy Douglas RocheA short, pointed, informative overview of ':the world':s best hope': for humanity in this century |
Hard-headed but idealistic people around the globe -- both those in high offices and ordinary citizens -- are ridding the world of war |
How We Stopped Loving the BombAn insider's account of the world on the brink of banning nuclear armsBy Douglas Roche, Foreword by Romeo DallaireA former UN ambassador talks about the new push for nuclear abolition. |
This book presents the case for a worldwide ban on nuclear weapons. |
Titles
Author on:How We Stopped Loving the Bomb - An insider's account of the world on the brink of banning nuclear arms
Peacemakers - How people around the world are building a world free of war
The Ultimate Evil - The Fight to Ban Nuclear Weapons
The United Nations in the 21st Century - Grappling with the world's most challenging issues: militarism, the environment, human rights, inequality