Contents
I. Introduction 4
II. Predecessors and the history of the UN-System 5
a) The Hague Peace Conferences 5
b) The League of Nations 5
c) The genesis of the United Nations 7
a) The United Nations during the cold war (1945 - 1954) 8
b) The period between 1955 and 1963 9
c) The third part between 1964 and 1973 9
d) The fourth decade from 1974 - 1986 10
e) The Time of Change 1987 10
d) The differences between the LN’s and the UN 11
III. Theories of International Organizations 12
1.) Definition of IOs 12
2.) Schools of thought and its basic assumptions 13
a) Neo Realism 13
b) Neo-institutionalism 14
c) Game theory 15
ca) Stag Hunt 16
cb) Battle of Sexes 16
cc) Prisoner’s Dilemma 16
d) Social Constructivism 17
3) Role and function of IOs 18
a) Role of IOs 18
aa) Instrument 18
ab) Arena 18
ac) Actor 18
b) Function of IOs 19
ba) Articulation and aggregation 19
bb) Norms 19
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bc) Recruitment 19 bd) Socialization 19 be) Rule making 20 bf) Rule application 20 bg) Rule adjudication 20 bh) Information 20 bi) Operations 20
IV. Case studies on choosen examples 21 1) The Korean War 21
a) Neo Realism 21
aa) hypothesis 21 ab) result 21 2) Racial discrimination 22 a) Social Constructivism 22 aa) hypothesis 22 ab) result 22 3) The former Yugoslavia 23 a) Neo-Institutionalism 23 aa) hypothesis 23 ab) result 23 V. Conclusion 24
VI. Bibliography 25
3
I. Introduction
The history of international relations, which is dominated by competition of states, was impressed by the overcoming of this structure. There were several philosophers like Niccolò Machiavelli, Immanuel Kant and Jürgen Habermas who were engaged in answering the basic question about how states could cooperate and how they could solve their conflicts. 1 International organizations (IOs) are one response to the growing tension in world society between the process of integration and the desire for separation. The Industrial Revolution, the creation and integration of the world economy and at the same time the movement of ideas and people, as well as that of goods and services were the basics for the idea of globalisation. There was also a growth of nationalism, particularly strong in eighteenth- and nineteenthcentury Europe. Subjects became citizens, and there was a tendency to a sharper demarcation of identities based on language, religion and ethnicity. The growth of IOs is a reflection of the spirit of the times of the nineteenth century and early twentieth century. The United Nations Organization is the second try to order the international system and to minimise the “perils of anarchy.” 2 It’s the second try to trust in an organization for securing the “peace of the world” by the people of the world, after the League of Nations. After the Second World War, the demand of governance in world affairs was growing. The UN are a product of rising interdependencies among the states in the international system.
IOs are the operative objects in this essay. In the first part of this essay, I will provide some basic historical information, which gives a better understanding of the circumstances of the evolution of the United Nations System. After a definition of IOs, I will analyse the United Nations System, its function as an IO, by giving examples of the history of the UN. In this essay I will sketch, firstly, why IOs will be created. Secondly, I want to investigate if IOs matter. Thirdly, I will subject to closer scrutiny how the action of IOs do differ between the different issue areas. By answering these questions, I will deal with the theories on the current scientific debate. Coming from these theories, I will develop hypotheses and apply them to some cases exemplary for the most important historical periods.
1 Czempiel, Ernst-Otto: Friedensstrategien. Eine systematische Darstellung außenpolitischer Theorien von
Machiavelli bis Madariaga, Opladen, 1998. p.15
2 Gareis, Sven Bernhard/ Varwick, Johannes: Die Vereinten Nationen. Aufgaben, Instrumente und Reformen,
Opladen: Leske + Budrich, 2002. p.13
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II. Predecessors and the history of the UN-System
1) The Hague Peace Conferences
The predecessors of the UN were the Hague Peace Conferences (HPC) and the League of Nations (LNs). The First HPC in July 1899 was convened by the Russian Czar Nicholas II to discuss limitation of arms and peaceful methods to settle international disputes. The second conference was in 1907. The main results were the “Haager Landkriegsordnung” and the installation of an arbitration court. 3 But considering the challenges of the First World War the HPCs failed. The problem was that it lacked an effective executive police power as prescribed by President Theodore Roosevelt. 2) The League of Nations
During the time of the First World War, there was a process of forming an IO for peace among the “big three” (USA, GB, UdSSR). The first meeting of this IO, called the LNs, took place in 1916 in Washington D.C.. The state representatives also wanted to create a new, permanent world organization that would deal with the problem of peace and security and with economic and social questions. U.S. President Woodrow Wilson was the leading figure for the evolution of the LNs. Wilson formulated the war aims and peace suggestions of the United States and presented them before the Congress of the United States on January 1918 as his famous "14 Points". His major aim was a peaceful world that is safe for self-governing nations. In conclusion, he demanded in his 14th point: “open covenants of peace, openly arrived at” and no secret treaties, the free navigation of the seas outside territorial waters, equality of trade and removal of economic barriers and “adequate guarantees given and taken that national armaments will be reduced to the lowest point consistent with domestic safety.” The last point he stressed was the concrete wish for an IO to maintain peace constructed by international law.
The LNs was established in 1919, like the ILO. The basis of the LNs was the covenant which was included in the Treaty of Versailles and the other peace treaties. The covenant consisted of 26 articles. The organs of the IO were an assembly, composed of all member nations; a council, composed of the great powers (originally Great Britain, France, Italy, and Japan, later
5
also Germany and the USSR) and of four other, non-permanent members; and a secretariat. Both the assembly and the council were empowered to discuss “any matter within the sphere of action of the LNs or affecting the peace of the world.” In both the assembly and the council, unanimous decisions were required.
The original membership of the LNs included the victorious allies of World War I without the United States and most of the neutral nations. Together it had 19 members. The installation of the LNs was firstly the result of the brutality of the first World War, which makes clear the important need of peace. Secondly, there was the peace movement which developed parallel to the Vienna consultation-system. This movement formulated the persuasion that war can only be avoided by international organizations. Thirdly, US President Wilson was a strong actor.
The LNs quickly proved its value by settling the Swedish-Finnish dispute over the Åland Islands (1920-21), guaranteeing the security of Albania (1921), rescuing Austria from economic disaster, settling the division of Upper Silesia (1922), and preventing the outbreak of war in the Balkans between Greece and Bulgaria (1925). In addition, the LNs extended considerable aid to refugees; it helped to suppress white slave and opium traffic; it did pioneering work in surveys of health; it extended financial aid to needy states; and it furthered international co-operation in labour relations and many other fields. But it failed to bring its political influence to bear. The major failing of the LNs was the striking absence of a system of collective security, due to the absence of the major powers, such as Germany, the Soviet Union and the United States, whose Senate refused to ratify the Treaty of Versailles. “This meant that LNs action was constantly at risk of being perceived as the work of the remaining members,[...].” 4
The whole LNs system can be seen as a crucial link which brought together the strand of pre-1914 international organizations and wartime cooperation into a more centralized and systematic form on a global scale, thus providing a stepping-stone towards the more enduring United Nations.
3 Rittberger, Volker/Zangel, Bernhard: Internationale Organisationen - Politik und Geschichte: Europäische und
weltweite zwischenstaatliche Zusammenschlüsse, 3. Edition, Opladen: Leske + Budrich, 2003. p.52
4 Groom, A.J.R.: Getting to ‘GO’. The Birth of the United Nations System, in: Taylor, Paul/Groom, A.J.R. (eds.):
The United Nations at the Millenium The Principl Organs, Continuum, 2000. p.7
6
3) The genesis of the United Nations
The term “United Nations” was created by U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who first used this term in his correspondence with the English Prime Minister Winston Churchill. By this term, he referred to the 26 states of the Washington-pact of 10 th January 1942. This pact was an obligation for those countries allied with the axis of the Second World War not to close separate armistices. With their agreement, they also ratified the Atlantic-Charter. This Charter contained the basics of a new system of the world after the Second World War. 5 This system of an enduring and extensive system of security was a development from the declaration of the “4 freedoms” 6 and contained the renunciation of territorial gains and respect for the right of self-determination of the people. 7 It was clear for the wartime allied leaders that they would not create a new collective security system on the old LNs’ structure. 8 On this basis, a growing cooperation developed, as shown for instance during several international conferences, such as the conference of Casablanca in 1943 and the allied foreign ministers’ meeting in Moscow from the 19 th - 30 th October, 1943. By the end of this conference, the USA, the UdSSR, GB and China agreed on the general outline of a charter centred on maintaining peace and security through an international organization. 9 This was a remarkable step because of the doubts of Winston Churchill about an alliance of the four powers. The British Prime Minister was not persuaded that the four powers would work together if the issue was not dealing with their own interests. He, therefore, proposed a world council which should be divided in three parts for regional councils, one for the western hemisphere, one for Europe and one for the Middle East. 10 The USA tried to make another proposal for a system of the world. They wanted to create a system of two powers, consisting of the USA and GB.
5 Hüfner, Klaus; Naumann Jens: Organisation der Vereinten Nationen/Vereinte Nationen/ VN. In: Andersen,
Uwe; Wichard Woyke (Hrsg.): Handwörterbuch Internationaler Organisationen. 2. Edition, Opladen 1995, p. 341
6 The „4 freedoms“ was the product of an congress ambassy of the US President Roosevelt in January 1941. „4
freedoms“ means the freedom of the speech, opinion, religion and freedom of need and fear.
7 Look at ,,Atlantik-Charta", Kinder, Hermann; Werner Hilgemann: dtv-Atlas zur Weltgeschichte. Karten und
Chronologischer Abriss. Band 2. Von der Französischen Revolution bis zur Gegenwart. 30. Edition, München
1996, p.487
8 Armstrong, David: From Versailles to Maastricht. International Organizations in the Twentieth Century,
London: Macmillan. p.80ff.
9 look at the footprint 7
10 Volger, Helmut: Entstehungsgeschichte der Vereinten Nationen. In: Volger, Helmut (Hrsg.): Lexikon der
Vereinten Nationen. 1. Edition, München, Wien, Oldenburg 2000, p.84 ff
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Arbeit zitieren:
Matthias Mißler, 2003, The Evolution of the UN System and IO-Theory, München, GRIN Verlag GmbH
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