For decades, the prospect of a civilisation‑ending confrontation between major powers shaped public consciousness. While nuclear weapons have not been used in war since 1945, the risk has remained present, even as public attention shifted toward other existential threats such as the climate crisis plus fast‑moving Artificial Intelligence. The Treaty on the Non‑Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), in force for more than half a century, has been a key part of the global architecture limiting the spread of nuclear weapons.
Recent conflicts have changed the tone of global debate. Nuclear language has re‑entered public discourse, prompting the UN to invest in programmes that make disarmament more accessible to new audiences.
One such initiative is the Youth Leaders Fund for a World without Nuclear Weapons (YLF), run by the UN Office for Disarmament Affairs (UNODA).
At an event hosted at the Poster House museum in New York, supported by UNODA plus organised by the Government of Japan, participants from the programme’s second cohort presented artwork designed to translate technical disarmament concepts into public narratives.
Arts producer Natalie Chen, based in the United Kingdom plus originally from Hong Kong, said nuclear risk had not been a central concern for many peers until rising tensions brought the issue back into focus. After joining the YLF, Chen said the programme has helped clarify the political processes shaping disarmament debates.
Digital artist Abdul Mustafazade said art can make highly technical disarmament language more understandable, helping advocacy reach broader communities.
UN High Representative for Disarmament Affairs Izumi Nakamitsu said younger experts are essential as nuclear risks evolve alongside modern threats such as AI integration into command plus control systems plus cyber vulnerabilities. Nakamitsu said the disarmament community often relies on frameworks shaped by past eras, while emerging technologies introduce new instability.
The youth-focused event took place alongside the 2026 NPT review conference, running at UN Headquarters until May 22, reinforcing a central UN message: the nuclear order remains under strain, plus public engagement remains vital to sustaining international restraint.
–UN/ChannelAfrica–
