![]()
Paul Doty
Director Emeritus, Center for Science and International Affairs; Mallinckrodt Professor of Biochemistry, Emeritus
Member of the Board, Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs
Summer 1975
"Strategic Arms Limitation After SALT I"
Journal Article, Daedalus, issue 3, volume 104
By Paul Doty, Director Emeritus, Center for Science and International Affairs; Mallinckrodt Professor of Biochemistry, Emeritus
In a 1975 paper in the journal Daedalus, Paul Doty, founder of the Belfer Center, writes that "If the Vladivostok Agreement of November, 1974, is transformed into a treaty, we will have reached a turning point in the long, tortuous, frustrating effort to bring strategic nuclear weapons under control. This turning point will not necessarily be a breakthrough, however; no substantial controls on existing or planned strategic weapons systems will have been accomplished. Still, some essential steps have been taken."
1972
"Can Investigations Improve Scientific Advice? The Case of the ABM"
Journal Article, Minerva, issue 2, volume 10
By Paul Doty, Director Emeritus, Center for Science and International Affairs; Mallinckrodt Professor of Biochemistry, Emeritus
"Not since Franklin Roosevelt's draft law cleared the House of Representatives by one vote in the summer of 1941 had a President been put to so stern a challenge by Congress on a major question of national defense," Paul Doty writes. "Richard Nixon had staked his prestige on a no-compromise commitment to the view that a beginning on the Safeguard anti-ballistic-missile (ABM) system was " absolutely essential" to America's security. Precisely half the U.S. Senate said he was wrong. In the showdown last week, Mr. Nixon won . . . . But the hairbreadth margin of his victory--51 to 50 on the critical test vote—put the President and the military on notice that their will in defense matters, unchallenged for a generation, would no longer pass without question."
September 10, 1971
"The Community of Science and the Search for Peace"
Journal Article, Science, issue 4001, volume 173
By Paul Doty, Director Emeritus, Center for Science and International Affairs; Mallinckrodt Professor of Biochemistry, Emeritus
"To speak of the community of science and the search for peace at this moment of history may seem anachronistic, if not actually pretentious. To many people, external suspicions and internal doubts seem to have robbed science of the self-confidence and sense of purpose that have given it the coherence of a community. To all who have for years striven to end the Vietnam War, the suggestion that peace requires only a search may seem empty and superficial," writes Paul Doty, founder of the Belfer Center, a biological scientist and proponent of international peace and security, "To contest these points and give substance to this title requires our stepping back into a larger frame of time and freeing ourselves from some of these moods of the moment"
December 13, 1969
"The Academic Condition in the United States"
Journal Article, Nature, volume 224
By Paul Doty, Director Emeritus, Center for Science and International Affairs; Mallinckrodt Professor of Biochemistry, Emeritus
In analyzing the growing Vietnam protest movement at the time, Belfer Center founder Paul Doty writes that, "One person can at most add only a drop to the oceans of reporting and analysis of student protest.... It is neither valid nor useful to think only of the radicals and the rest. A recent survey of student attitudes (January 1969) makes this clear. This is the spectrum which emerged: revolutionaries, 3 percent; radical dissidents, 10 percent; reformers, 39 percent; moderates, 37 percent; conservatives, 11 percent. Thus only a quarter are at the extremes while three-quarters dominate the broad middle ground; it is these who will surely determine what is to become permanent from this cultural revolution."
October 7, 1969
"Prof. Doty Explains Views in a Letter"
Op-Ed, Boston Globe
By Paul Doty, Director Emeritus, Center for Science and International Affairs; Mallinckrodt Professor of Biochemistry, Emeritus
"The decision which the [Harvard] Faculty faces on Tuesday with respect to the Vietnam War motion may be of such consequence that I should like to correct beforehand some misrepresentations of my own involvement in the issue," Paul Doty, founder of Harvard's Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Department, wrote in a letter in the Boston Globe in defense of the Faculty's motion to officially oppose the Vietnam War.
Fall 1960
"The Role of Smaller Powers"
Journal Article, Daedalus, issue 4, volume 89
By Paul Doty, Director Emeritus, Center for Science and International Affairs; Mallinckrodt Professor of Biochemistry, Emeritus
"As France greeted the fifteenth year of the nuclear age with the explosion of her first atomic bomb, the nuclear club expanded for the first time in nearly eight years. Without international agreements or a display of national self-control uncommon to these times, admissions will come with much greater frequency. Today the smaller powers, the twenty-odd nations that by their own efforts could gain admittance to the club within another eight years, await their inevitable rendezvous with Mephistopheles," wrote Paul Doty, founder of the Belfer Center, about the prospects of the expansion of the worlds most exclusive club, that of the nuclear powers.
Arms Control for New Nuclear Nations
Book Chapter
By Steven Flank, Former Research Fellow, International Security Program, 1991-1993 and Paul Doty, Director Emeritus, Center for Science and International Affairs; Mallinckrodt Professor of Biochemistry, Emeritus



