30/8/7 -- The debate over how to achieve peace revolves around two poles: world peacekeeping and disarmament vs economic and social development. The latter argument goes: busy literate hands and full stomachs obviate the need for war, just as the improvement of women's status leads to reduced family size.
Peace and Socialism
The UN: Achieving peace through development?
- Written by Eric Walberg Эрик Вальберг/ Уолберг إيريك والبرغ
While UN peacekeeping has done little to calm the world's troubled waters, the UN's other mandate -- development -- has had some success despite its many problems, argues Eric Walberg
The UN: Peacemaker or puppet?
- Written by Eric Walberg Эрик Вальберг/ Уолберг إيريك والبرغ
With its largest peacekeeping mission planned in Sudan, Eric Walberg considers the UN's track record in the first of two articles
16/8/7 -- Founded amidst the rubble of World War II -- well, actually in untouched San Francisco, with delegates spirited in by United States military planes, and nursed and spied on by a US determined to make the most of its new unrivalled world hegemony -- the United Nation started out with much more potential than its stillborn predecessor, the League of Nations, precisely because the US was committed. Even the Republicans were onboard, and all the major powers were present and willing. However, this US blessing was a two-edged sword and the UN's history is one of ups and downs with few political highpoints.
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