Global problems require global solutions. The United Nations as presently constituted, however, is incapable of addressing many global problems effectively. One nation– one vote decisionmaking in most UN agencies fails to reflect the distribution of power in the world at large, while the allocation of power in the Security Council is both unfair and anachronistic. Hence, nations are reluctant to endow the United Nations with the authority and the resources it needs. Extensive reform is essential. This analysis is rooted in the proposition that the design of decisionmaking systems greatly affects their legitimacy and effectiveness. Joseph Schwartzberg proposes numerous systemic improvements to the UN system, largely through weighted voting formulas that balance the needs of shareholders and stakeholders in diverse agencies. It indicates ways in which the interests of regions can supplement those of nations while voices of nongovernmental organizations and ordinary citizens can also be heard. In numerous contexts, it promotes meritocracy and gender equity. The book's aim is not to create an unrealistic utopia, but rather to establish a workable world in which the force of law supplants the law of force; a world committed to justice and continuous yet sustainable development. The author argues that, given the many existential threats now confronting our planet, the time frame for decisive action is short. The task is daunting and success is not guaranteed, but in view of the urgency of our situation, we can find ways of mustering the will, imagination, and resources to do the job.
... New Global Order: Emerging Trends in International Security (Toronto: Oxford University Press, 1993), pp. 64–7. Michael Howard, 'The United Nations and International Security', in A. Roberts and B. Kingsbury, United Nations, Divided ...
Transforming the United Nations System (RUSSIAN EDITION)
On the seventy-fifth anniversary of the United Nations, the world has faced its biggest shared test since the Second World War in the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic.
Transforming the United Nations System (JAPANESE EDITION)
This book contends that civil society must mobilize its capacities to bring a new will to national and international politics and oblige governments to act.
In S. G. Mijares, A. Rafea, & N. Angha (Eds.), A force such as the world has never known: Women creating change (pp. 40–52). Toronto, ON, Canada: Innana Publications. Beck, D.-M. (2016). Artistic and scientific: Broadening the scope of ...
The UN Tangle : Policy Formation , Reform , and Reorganization . ( Cambridge , Mass . , USA : World Peace Foundation , WFP Report No. 12 , 1996 ) . Gordon , Wendell . The United Nations at the Crossroads of Reform .
A Consensus for Change: Transforming the United Nation's Role in Global Economics
Renewing the United Nations System
By the same token, focusing on the interaction of the global indigenous movement with the UN system, this book examines the reverse influence, that is, the ways in which interacting with the UN system has influenced the claims, tactical ...