The 2024 Pact for the Future recognized youth participation as critical to international peace and security. Top: Young Latin American leaders gather in Lima in December to build a region free of armed violence through GenerAcción Paz, a collaboration between the United Nations Regional Centre for Peace, Disarmament and Development in Latin America and the Caribbean and the United Nations Development Programme. Bottom: Participants in the Youth Leader Fund for a World without Nuclear Weapons during their inaugural study visit to Japan in August.

THE FOREWORD

I am pleased to present the 2024 United Nations Disarmament Yearbook. For nearly five decades, this publication has provided an objective record of developments in multilateral disarmament, non-proliferation and arms control. Now in its forty-ninth volume, the Yearbook continues its vital mission to document efforts by the United Nations, Member States and other stakeholders to advance international peace and security through disarmament initiatives and arms control measures. Its enhanced preview edition, issued earlier in the year, equips policymakers and the public with a timely and authoritative overview of the most salient developments in this field.

As we reflect on the past year, we face a sobering truth: the international security architecture, built painstakingly over decades, now faces extraordinary strain. The proliferation of active conflicts, the erosion of established arms control frameworks and unprecedented military spending all signal a regression in our collective commitment to peace and security. The rapidly accelerating pace of these challenges starkly contrasts with the deliberate tempo of diplomatic processes — a fundamental misalignment portending yet more peril for people and the planet.

THE TIMELINE
JAN
22 JAN - 28 MAR

Conference on Disarmament, 1st session

Secretary-General António Guterres attends the Conference on Disarmament in Geneva on 26 February to deliver his statement during the high-level segment.

APR
1 APR
28 APR

20th anniversary: adoption of Security Council resolution 1540 (2004)

The Security Council unanimously adopts resolution 1540 (2004) on 28 April 2004, deciding that all States would establish domestic controls to prevent the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and means of delivery, in particular for terrorist purposes.

JUN
18 JUN

Fourth Review Conference of the Programme of Action on Small Arms and Light Weapons

Maritza Chan Valverde, President of the fourth Review Conference on the Programme of Action on Small Arms and Light Weapons and Permanent Representative of Costa Rica to the United Nations, briefs reporters on 19 June in New York.

SEP
5 SEP

First Youth Leader Fund programme participants adopt DeclarACTION

Participants of the Youth Leader Fund for a World without Nuclear Weapons showcase their traditional Japanese calligraphy with peace messages during their study visit to Hiroshima in August.

18 SEP

25th anniversary: entry into force of the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention

Norwegian People's Aid representatives pose on the way to the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention's fifth Review Conference venue in Siem Reap, Cambodia, during a march for a mine-free world on 24 November. Over 3,000 people, including deminers, joined the march.

OCT
7 OCT - 8 NOV

Seventy-ninth session of the First Committee of the General Assembly

DEC
1 DEC

65th anniversary: adoption of the Antarctic Treaty

Herman Phleger, United States Representative at the Diplomatic Conference in Washington, D.C., signs the Antarctic Treaty on 1 December 1959. Paul C. Daniels, Alternate United States Representative, looks on (standing), and Secretary of State Christian A. Herter is seated at the back.

Nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation
Biological and chemical weapons
Conventional weapons
Regional disarmament
Emerging, cross-cutting and other issues
Gender and disarmament
Disarmament machinery
Information and outreach
Resolutions, status of treaties and other resources
THE CHAPTERS
DOWNLOADOTHER FORMATS
Disarmament Yearbook cover for PDF and ebook
ABOUT THE YEARBOOK
  • Concise reference tool on disarmament, non-proliferation and arms control issues
  • Includes developments and trends, a convenient issue-oriented timeline and explanatory graphics and charts
  • Annex on resolutions, status of treaties and other resources: a one-stop-shop to access recommended 2024 information materials, including publications and the following databases:
  1. Disarmament Resolutions and Decisions Database: texts, sponsors, voting patterns and other related information.
  2. Disarmament Treaties Database: status of multilateral regulation and disarmament agreements.
  • User-friendly: Accessible on mobile devices and available in multiple languages through third-party machine translation (see how: Chrome | Safari). Official translations in the six official languages of the United Nations will be uploaded as they become available.

CONDENSED PREVIEW VS. FULL YEARBOOK

Preview edition: An advance and condensed version that provides an easy-to-read overview of the publication earlier in the year. Available in PDF and website formats in July 2025.

Full edition: Expands upon the preview edition. Provides more comprehensive information on the year’s activities. Available in website form in September 2025.