electronicsleader

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Sunday, 18 August 2013

United Nations: Backstory

Posted on 20:41 by Unknown
I always presume everyone knows all about the history of the U.N.--but then I am older than the average person and while I was growing up I visited the U.N. a couple of times and living in NYC have met all these people who work there or are with foreign Consulates here..


 Wall across First Avenue with staircase has that famous biblical quote about "They shall beat their swords into plowshares.." And then there is also that cool St. George and Dragon sculpture (donated by what was then Soviet Union)...I KNOW I have a couple of good photos of this of my own but had to go to the net for this one, darn



 Well, on the historical part...

The United Nations

History, Organization, and Functions of The United Nations

From Amanda Briney, Contributing Writer
United Nations Headquarters
United Nations Headquarters in New York City
Getty/Sjostedt
See More About
  • united nations
  • international organizations
  • political geography
Updated January 01, 2012
The United Nations is an international organization designed to make the enforcement of international law, security, economic development, social progress, and human rights easier for countries around the world. The United Nations includes 193 member countries and its main headquarters are located in New York City.

History and Principles of the United Nations

Prior to the United Nations (UN), the League of Nations was the international organization responsible for ensuring peace and cooperation between world nations. It was founded in 1919 "to promote international cooperation and to achieve peace and security." At its height, the League of Nations had 58 members and was considered successful. In the 1930s its success waned as the Axis Powers (Germany, Italy, and Japan) gained influence, eventually leading to the start of World War II in 1939.
The term "United Nations" was then coined in 1942 by Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt in the Declaration by United Nations. This declaration was made to officially state the cooperation of the Allies (Great Britain, the United States, and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) and other nations during World War II.

The UN as it is known today however was not officially founded until 1945 when the Charter of the United Nations was drafted at the UN Conference on International Organization in San Francisco, California. The conference was attended by 50 nations and several non-governmental organizations - all of which signed the Charter. The UN officially came into existence on October 24, 1945 after ratification of the Charter.

The principles of the UN as explained in the Charter are to save future generations from war, reaffirm human rights, and establish equal rights for all persons. In addition it also aims to promote justice, freedom, and social progress for the peoples of all of its member states.

Organization of the United Nations Today

In order to handle the complex task of getting its member states to cooperate most efficiently, the UN today is divided into five branches. The first is the UN General Assembly. This is the main decision-making and representative assembly in the UN and is responsible for upholding the principles of the UN through its policies and recommendations. It is composed of all member states, is headed by a president elected from the member states, and meets from September to December each year. The UN Security Council is another branch in the organization of the UN and is the most powerful of all the branches. It has power to authorize the deployment UN member states' militaries, can mandate a cease-fire during conflicts, and can enforce penalties on countries if they do not comply with given mandates. It is composed of five permanent members and ten rotating members.

The next branch of the UN is the International Court of Justice, located in The Hague, Netherlands. This branch is responsible for the judicial matters of the UN. The Economic and Social Council is a branch that assists the General Assembly in promoting economic and social development as well as cooperation of member states. Finally, the Secretariat is the branch UN headed by the Secretary General. Its main responsibility is providing studies, information, and other data when needed by other UN branches for their meetings.

United Nations Membership

Today, almost every fully recognized independent states are member states in the UN. As outlined in the UN Charter, to become a member of the UN a state must accept both peace and all obligations outlined in Charter and be willing to carry out any action to satisfy those obligations. The final decision on admission to the UN is carried out by the General Assembly after recommendation by the Security Council.

Functions of the United Nations Today

As it was in the past, the main function of the UN today is to maintain peace and security for all of its member states. Though the UN does not maintain its own military, it does have peacekeeping forces which are supplied by its member states. On approval of the UN Security Council, these peacekeepers are often sent to regions where armed conflict has recently ended to discourage combatants from resuming fighting. In 1988, the peacekeeping force won a Nobel Peace Prize for its actions.
In addition to maintaining peace, the UN aims to protect human rights and provide humanitarian assistance when needed. In 1948, the General Assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as a standard for its human rights operations. The UN currently provides technical assistance in elections, helps to improve judicial structures and draft constitutions, trains human rights officials, and provides food, drinking water, shelter, and other humanitarian services to peoples displaced by famine, war, and natural disaster.

Finally, the UN plays an integral part in social and economic development through its UN Development Program. This is the largest source of technical grant assistance in the world. In addition, the World Health Organization, UNAIDS, The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria, the UN Population Fund, and the World Bank Group to name a few play an essential role in this aspect of the UN as well. The UN also annually publishes the Human Development Index to rank countries in terms of poverty, literacy, education, and life expectancy.

For the future, the UN has established what it calls its Millennium Development Goals. Most of its member states and various international organizations have all agreed to achieve these goals relating to reducing poverty, child mortality, fighting diseases and epidemics, and developing a global partnership in terms of international development by 2015. Some member states have achieved a number of the agreement's goals while others have reached none. However, the UN has been successful over the years and only the future can tell how the true realization of these goals will play out.
The United Nations
  • Non-Members of the United Nations
  • United Nations Security Council
  • UN Member Countries
Related Articles
  • United Nations - What Is the United Nations - How Does the United Nations A...
  • What Is the UN? Video
  • Zionism, Racism and the United Nations - How a UN Resolution Linked Zionism...
  • Global Broadband Policies and The Role of the UN
  • Federal Lawmakers Express Concern Over UN's Proposed Internet Governanc...
Matt Rosenberg
Matt Rosenberg
Geography Guide
  • Sign up for My Newsletter
  • Headlines
  • Forum
Advertisement
Top Related Searches soviet socialist republics union of soviet socialist republics new york city history charter of the united nations start of world war ii
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • SUNY Eye Care Center on West 42nd Street
    Now, this is a place that I have personal experience with--for years--and a good place to end for tonight. While I found Lenscrafters to be ...
  • The REAL results of all this shell game stuff with Lotteries- from the NY Times
    I would never take articles from the NY Times like this except that I am getting so angry at the way people are being encouraged to live in ...
  • Tours of Macchu Picchu and Peru--from About.com
    Here are a couple of stories about visiting Macchu Picchu in Peru  This one is about choosing a tour Peru Travel Peru Travel Pla...
  • Off the Wall--Rave Reviews for Frozen Yogurt in Upper East Midtown
    Oh no, not another frozen yogurt place you say.. Listen, it is August in NYC and this is the time for places like this! Besides, it gets gre...
  • Architectural Investigator: 441 East 57th Street
    I chose this building because I wanted a place of Contemporary Design set down among a lot of traditional 1920's high rise apartment bui...
  • Very Historic St. James Church
    I had never really noticed this church on the  Upper East Side before, but when I got a good look at that spire, I knew something historical...
  • More New Stuff Coming on West 34th Street...Unopened Store already showing huge video images
    I thought it was amusing that a store under construction on the North side of West 34th Street between Fifth and Sixth already has a big vid...
  • Could not resist this Library Post either--Best Books about NYC ( or SOME of the best)
    I know, I WAS signing off but this post from the New York Public Library is so germane to my blog that I had to share this... Here Is New Yo...
  • Tudor City--Labor Day 2013
    I have covered Tudor City a couple of times before, just thought I would do an update... Below: Walk through main upper portion of Tudor Cit...
  • The Bryant Park Hotel
    I have never met anyone who stayed at the Bryant Park Hotel-- the former Landmark American Radiator Building...so I do not have the slightes...

Categories

  • Union Square July 20 2013

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (500)
    • ►  September (123)
    • ▼  August (322)
      • Upper West Side- Big Daddy's
      • Upper West Side- Hotel Newton
      • Upper West Side Banana Republic
      • Upper West Side- Cardinal Camera
      • Upper West Side- The Parlour Pub
      • Upper West Side -The Kosher Marketplace
      • Upper West Side Whole Foods
      • Upper West Side Days Hotel
      • Upper West Side Brooks Brothers
      • UpperWestSide-Bway&96thStreet--Surrounding Sights
      • Issac Asimov's 1964 Predictions for 2014-- From Op...
      • Karen Horney Clinic
      • Ads plastered over for the Goldbergs this Fall
      • Antiques in Greenwich Village
      • Le Pain Quotidien, Greenwich Village
      • From WNYC: About the career of the woman who may w...
      • United Cerebral Palsy of New York
      • Turtle Bay- neighborhood bar it seems
      • Ipad Art--Breaking Story, and then a tale from a y...
      • Kidville in the Village
      • Sculpture Old and New
      • The Kips Bay "Alphaville" Area Revisited--Urban Al...
      • From CBS News: Photos of NYC's old Penn Station
      • From a blog called Violent Rhymes: Essential Hosti...
      • From the New York Public Library- Blog- Origins of...
      • Solar energy and hydrogen
      • Solar compactors and solar energy...
      • Food workers protest in Union Square...
      • Big Belly Solar Compacters...solar compacters in g...
      • The Smith
      • Queensboro Hardware
      • Yigal Azrouel
      • Lenscrafters Midtown East
      • City Crab and Seafood (Steaks too it says)
      • L'Express- Bouchon
      • Buttercup Bake Shop Midtown East
      • Just Another Footnote to Life in the Big Apple: pe...
      • Vince 89 Mercer..wait, do they mean Vince Camuto? ...
      • Serafina
      • La Maison du Chocolat
      • BIG cinema-- unsual and also Asian films on East 5...
      • A Message of Remembrance from a Facebook Friend
      • Big Apple Frozen Yogurt...I know, this will be las...
      • The Stag's Head
      • Lilly Pulitzer
      • Missoni PLUS British "Business of Fashion" Article...
      • rug&kilim
      • Day& Meyer Murray&Young
      • 50th Anniversary of "I Have a Dream"-- from NBC News
      • Tech Radar story on Google Glass
      • Mayoral Race- Supermarket Head John Catsimatidis,...
      • Ali Baba
      • Jos A Bank
      • Guess Fifth Avenue
      • Coach bags etc.
      • From WNYC-- The Bossless Office
      • Taking a Break-- Midtownblogger will resume either...
      • The Universal Struggle for Human Rights-- Martin L...
      • Pink Madison Avenue
      • Bikes on the Streets
      • Armani XChange Fifth Avenue
      • More in the Subway Musicians Series
      • New York.com's Guide to the Best Secrets of the Me...
      • The Metropolitan Museum- And the Billion Dollar Do...
      • Some Strikingly Simple and Compelling Photos Back ...
      • Lego Rockefeller Center
      • Clark's --Fifth Avenue has no reviews, so we do Th...
      • Aritzia
      • Michael Kors
      • Cole Haan
      • Bike Messengers Must Have Licenses? Accidents prov...
      • J. Crew
      • Ann Taylor
      • Hotel Roosevelt
      • Build a Bear? This Sounds Expensive
      • Redken on Fifth Avenue- Course and Laboratories
      • OK, No Labor Day Parade for Mayoral Hoprefuls-- bu...
      • New York Fifth Avenue Rents Second Only to Hong Kong
      • Update on Rockefeller Center-Saks Fifth Avenue and...
      • A Visit to "The Gluckmans"-- A Little Personal Not...
      • Bus on First Avenue--Yelper's Love the Tour called...
      • Sweet Violinist in Subway
      • Dublin Hotel and Tap Room
      • Apthorp Apartments-- Amazing Old Place on Upper Br...
      • From Forgotten NY: S. Klein Department Store on Un...
      • People in Traffic Island, Broadway on the Upper We...
      • First Baptist Curch
      • Oh yeah, Boardwalk Empire
      • Designer Shoe Warehouse- Upper West Side, Broadway
      • Cafe at 79th Street Boat Basin
      • 79th Street Boat Basin Upper West Side
      • NYC Grid....
      • 66th Street East Side Big White Brick Apartment Bu...
      • Kennedy Child Study Center on East 67th Street
      • Ace Hotel--Flatiron/Midtown
      • Zaro's Grand Central
      • Anti-Zionist Jews Demonstrate
      • The Christian Herald
      • Architecture Notebook: Woman behind the Seagram's ...
      • East River Esplanade- Rainy Day with Helicopter
    • ►  July (55)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile