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When the UN was founded in 1945 it was dominated by the old colonial empires. Nearly one‐third of humanity – about 750 million people – then lived under colonial rule . The original 51 member states included Britain, France, Belgium, the Netherlands and other imperial powers (and even South Africa), while many colonized peoples had no independent representation. From the start, however, the UN CharterUN Charter Full Description:The foundational treaty of the United Nations. It serves as the constitution of international relations, codifying the principles of sovereign equality, the prohibition of the use of force, and the mechanisms for dispute…
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Introduction The United Nations emerged at the end of World War II as a bold experiment in collective security, determined “to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war.” But in the early Cold War (roughly 1947–1956) the UN’s high-minded ideals quickly ran up against intense U.S.–Soviet rivalry. Instead of disarming, both superpowers used the UN to press their own agendas, often paralyzing the organization’s decision-making. Security CouncilSecurity Council Full Description:The Security Council is the only UN body with the authority to issue binding resolutions and authorize military force. While the General Assembly includes all nations, real power is concentrated here. The…
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In the immediate aftermath of World War II, the world faced the horror of unprecedented atrocities and the challenge of building a new international order. The United Nations was founded in 1945 on principles of peace and justice, but by 1948 the Cold War rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union was already shaping global politics. In this climate of both hope and tension, two landmark achievements emerged: the Genocide Convention (adopted 9 December 1948) and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (adopted 10 December 1948). Both drew on the war’s lessons – especially the Holocaust and other…
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The Yalta Conference of early February 1945 took place in a devastated World War II Europe. By that point Allied victory in Europe was all but certain – Soviet armies were closing on Berlin from the east, while American and British forces were pushing in from the west . Yet the war against Japan still raged in the Pacific, and the three leaders (Churchill, Roosevelt, StalinStalin Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin (18 December 1878 – 5 March 1953) was a Soviet politician, dictator and revolutionary who led the Soviet Union from 1924 until his death in 1953. Read More) gathered in Livadia…
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Introduction: A Blueprint in Wartime In August 1941, a battered world paused to hear of an extraordinary meeting. Winston Churchill, Prime Minister of Britain, crossed the Atlantic aboard HMS Prince of Wales to meet Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the still-neutral United States, aboard USS Augusta off Newfoundland. Their joint declaration, soon dubbed the Atlantic Charter, was hailed as a promise of a better postwar order: no territorial aggrandizement, the right of all peoples to choose their form of government, freer trade, disarmament, and a system of general security. To many contemporaries it looked like the seed of a new…
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In the aftermath of World War I, hope for a new world order led to the founding of the League of Nations. Delegates from the victorious Allied and other nations met in Geneva in late 1920 to begin what President Woodrow Wilson had famously termed “a general association of nations…affording mutual guarantees of political independence and territorial integrity” . Indeed, Wilson’s 14th Point, attached as the League’s Covenant in the Treaty of Versailles, called for exactly such an association. The League’s structure mirrored those ideals: an Assembly of all member states (initially 42 nations) and a smaller Executive Council (with…
