_version_ 1866908382897635328
author Altmann, J.
Amaldi, U.
Barone, M.
Bassalat, A.
Bona, M.
Beullens, J.
Brand, H.
Brentjes, S.
Britzger, D.
Ellis, J.
Franchoo, S.
Giammanco, A.
Glazov, A.
Heck, C.
Jung, H.
Kraml, S.
Lönnblad, L.
Mangano, M.
Renneberg, M.
Riebe, Th.
Sabio-Vera, A.
Sanders, R.
Scheffran, J.
Schmelling, M.
Schucker, T.
Suzuki, T.
Tanasijczuk, A.
Tsakov, I.
Valls-Gabaud, D.
Walker, M.
author_facet Altmann, J.
Amaldi, U.
Barone, M.
Bassalat, A.
Bona, M.
Beullens, J.
Brand, H.
Brentjes, S.
Britzger, D.
Ellis, J.
Franchoo, S.
Giammanco, A.
Glazov, A.
Heck, C.
Jung, H.
Kraml, S.
Lönnblad, L.
Mangano, M.
Renneberg, M.
Riebe, Th.
Sabio-Vera, A.
Sanders, R.
Scheffran, J.
Schmelling, M.
Schucker, T.
Suzuki, T.
Tanasijczuk, A.
Tsakov, I.
Valls-Gabaud, D.
Walker, M.
contents After the end of World War II, the commitment to confine scientific activities in universities and research institutions to peaceful and civilian purposes has entered, in the form of {\it Civil Clauses}, the charters of many research institutions and universities. In the wake of recent world events, the relevance and scope of such Civil Clauses has been questioned in reports issued by some governments and by the EU Commission, a development that opens the door to a possible blurring of the distinction between peaceful and military research. This paper documents the reflections stimulated by a panel discussion on this issue recently organized by the Science4Peace Forum. We review the adoptions of Civil Clauses in research organizations and institutions in various countries, present evidence of the challenges that are emerging to such Civil Clauses, and collect arguments in favour of maintaining the purely civilian and peaceful focus of public (non-military) research.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2505_22476
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Science for Peace and the need for Civil Clauses at universities and civilian research institutions
Altmann, J.
Amaldi, U.
Barone, M.
Bassalat, A.
Bona, M.
Beullens, J.
Brand, H.
Brentjes, S.
Britzger, D.
Ellis, J.
Franchoo, S.
Giammanco, A.
Glazov, A.
Heck, C.
Jung, H.
Kraml, S.
Lönnblad, L.
Mangano, M.
Renneberg, M.
Riebe, Th.
Sabio-Vera, A.
Sanders, R.
Scheffran, J.
Schmelling, M.
Schucker, T.
Suzuki, T.
Tanasijczuk, A.
Tsakov, I.
Valls-Gabaud, D.
Walker, M.
Physics and Society
High Energy Physics - Experiment
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology
After the end of World War II, the commitment to confine scientific activities in universities and research institutions to peaceful and civilian purposes has entered, in the form of {\it Civil Clauses}, the charters of many research institutions and universities. In the wake of recent world events, the relevance and scope of such Civil Clauses has been questioned in reports issued by some governments and by the EU Commission, a development that opens the door to a possible blurring of the distinction between peaceful and military research. This paper documents the reflections stimulated by a panel discussion on this issue recently organized by the Science4Peace Forum. We review the adoptions of Civil Clauses in research organizations and institutions in various countries, present evidence of the challenges that are emerging to such Civil Clauses, and collect arguments in favour of maintaining the purely civilian and peaceful focus of public (non-military) research.
title Science for Peace and the need for Civil Clauses at universities and civilian research institutions
topic Physics and Society
High Energy Physics - Experiment
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.22476