Stockholm International Peace Research Institute
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute is an international institute based in Stockholm. It was founded in 1966.
SIPRI was ranked among the top three non-US world-wide think tanks in 2014 by the University of Pennsylvania Lauder Institute's Global Go To Think Tanks Report. In 2019, SIPRI ranked at 31st place amongst think tanks globally.
History
In 1964, Prime Minister of Sweden Tage Erlander put forward the idea of establishing a peace research institute to commemorate Sweden's 150 years of unbroken peace.A Swedish Royal Commission chaired by Ambassador Alva Myrdal proposed in its 1966 report to establish an institute, later named the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, SIPRI. The Institute's research should seek to contribute to "the understanding of the preconditions for a stable peace and for peaceful solutions of international conflicts" and the Commission recommended that research be concentrated on armaments, their limitation and reduction, and arms control. The Commission also recommended that SIPRI work be of "an applied research character directed towards practical-political questions should be carried on in a constant interchange with research of a more theoretical kind".
SIPRI has built its reputation and standing on competence, professional skills, and the collection of hard data and precise facts, rendering accessible impartial information on weapon developments, arms transfers and production, military expenditure, as well as on arms limitations, reductions and disarmament. The task of the Institute is to conduct "scientific research on questions of conflict and cooperation of importance for international peace and security with the aim of contributing to an understanding of the conditions for peaceful solution of international conflicts and for a stable peace".
The Swedish Riksdag decided that the Institute be established on 1 July 1966 with the legal status of an independent foundation. All SIPRI research is based exclusively on open sources.
Organisation
SIPRI's organisation consists of a Governing Board, Director, Deputy Director, Research Staff Collegium and support staff. An Advisory Committee serves as a consultative body to the Institute. The Governing Board takes decisions on important matters concerning the research agenda, activities, organisation and financial administration of the Institute. Other matters are decided by the Director. The Research Staff Collegium advises the Director on research matters.The staff of about 70 employees is mainly international, with 25 different nationalities reported in 2019. The researchers are recruited for specific project periods and represent various academic disciplines. SIPRI also hosts guest researchers who work on issues related to research programmes as well as interns in relevant fields whose programmes of study can contribute to and benefit from SIPRI's research.
Governing board
Current members of the Governing Board:- Ambassador Jan Eliasson, retired Swedish diplomat and former Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations, as of 1 June 2017, Chair of the SIPRI Governing Board
- Vladimir Baranovsky, Director, Center for Situation Analysis
- Jean-Marie Guéhenno, Senior Advisor, Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue and a member of the UN Secretary General High-Level Advisory Board on Mediation
- Dan Smith, Director, SIPRI
- Patricia Lewis, Research Director, International Security at Chatham House
- Espen Barth Eide, Member of the Norwegian Parliament and former United Nations Special Adviser on Cyprus
- Radha Kumar, Chair,
- Jessica Tuchman Mathews, Former President of Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and current Distinguished Fellow
- Ambassador Ramtane Lamamra, Member of the UN Secretary-General’s High-level Advisory Board on Mediation and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Algeria
- Alva Myrdal
- Gunnar Myrdal
- Rolf Edberg
- Hans Blix
- Karin Söder
- Rolf Björnerstedt
- Ernst Michanek
- Inga Thorsson
- Daniel Tarschys
- Rolf Ekeus
- Göran Lennmarker
- Sven-Olof Petersson
Director
Former SIPRI Directors:
- Robert Neild
- Frank Barnaby
- Frank Blackaby
- Walther Stützle
- Adam Daniel Rotfeld
- Alyson Bailes
- Bates Gill
- Tilman Brück
- Ian Anthony
Deputy Director
Former SIPRI Deputy Directors:
- Örjan Berner
- Dr Rolf Björnerstedt
- Jan Mårtensson
- Sven Hirdman
- Bo Heinebäck
- Carl-Magnus Hyltenius
- Arne Kjellstrand
- Sven-Göran Henricsson
- Gustaf Stjernberg
- Madeleine Ströje-Wilkens
- Ove Svensson
- Jan Svedman
- Birgitta Alani
- Dr Christer Ahlström
- Daniel Nord
- Jakob Hallgren.
- Sigrún Rawet
Research
- Armament and Disarmament
- Conflict, Peace and Security
- Peace and Development
- Arms and Military Expenditure
- Nuclear disarmament, Arms Control and Non-proliferation
- Dual-use and Arms Trade Control
- Emerging Military and Security Technologies
- Africa
- Asia
- Europe
- Middle East and North Africa
- Climate Change and Risk
- Environment of Peace 2022
- Governance and Society
- Sustainable Peace
Databases
Events and conferences
Within the fields of study detailed above, workshops, conferences, seminars and lectures are organised in order to bring together a broad spectrum of expertise and to exchange views on subjects studied at the Institute. Among these, the biggest are the Stockholm Forum on Peace and Development and the Stockholm Security Conference. In 2020, Stockholm Forum on Peace and Development was for the first time held online, convening 3700 registrants from 163 countries in virtual discussions on the theme of "Sustaining Peace in the Time of COVID-19".Publications and information
SIPRI's publications and information material are distributed to a wide range of policy makers, researchers, journalists, organisations and the interested public. The results of the research are disseminated through the publication of books and reports by SIPRI and commissioned authors as well as through symposia and seminars. The Institute has forged its profile by concentrating on present-day realities, providing unbiased facts to states and individuals.SIPRI's main publication, the SIPRI Yearbook, was first published on 12 November 1969. The Yearbook serves as a single authoritative and independent source to which politicians, diplomats and journalists can turn for an account of what has happened during the past year in armaments and arms control, armed conflicts and conflict resolution, security arrangements and disarmament. It is translated into a number of other languages, notably Russian, Ukrainian, Chinese and Arabic.
SIPRI series:
- SIPRI Yearbook: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security
- SIPRI Monographs
- SIPRI Research Reports
- SIPRI Chemical & Biological warfare Studies
- SIPRI Policy Papers
- SIPRI Insights on Peace and Security
- SIPRI Fact Sheets and Policy Briefs
- Multi-author volumes
- Pocket-size summaries of the Yearbook in English and a number of other languages
- SIPRI Arms Transfers Database, Iraq 1973-1990
Finances
Peace research institutes
- Peace Research Institute Frankfurt
- Bonn International Center for Conversion
- International Peace Research Institute, Oslo
- Journal of Peace Research
- Tami Steinmetz Center for Peace Research
- Geneva International Peace Research Institute
Military budgets
- List of countries by military expenditures
- United Nations Security Council:
- Military budget of the People's Republic of China
- Military budget of Russia
- Military budget of the United States