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Home >  Books >  The Future of the United Nations
The Future of the United Nations
Print Mail
Understanding the Past to Chart a Way Forward
By Joshua Muravchik
Posted: Friday, August 12, 2005
The Future of the United Nations: Understanding the Past to Chart a Way Forward
175 pages
AEI Press  (Washington)
Publication Date: September 2005
Hardcover
ISBN: 084477183X
Price: $ 20.00
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View the press release/summary.

Rocked by scandal and divided by the smoldering enmities unleashed by the Iraq war, the United Nations faces its most critical hour. The secretary general and other leaders have offered their recipes for reform; in The Future of the United Nations, Joshua Muravchik argues that only far more radical reforms can salvage the UN as a useful institution.

The central cause of the UN’s failure, Muravchik says, is that it was structured as a proto world government, with the power to make “law” and enforce peace. Member states were asked to yield a measure of their independence in return for the protections that the UN would offer them. But Muravchik shows that this global “social contract” was a dead letter from the start, because the protections were illusory.

Initially, this failure was traced to the Cold War. But in more than fifteen years since the end of the Cold War, the UN has functioned little better, proving that there is a deeper flaw in its architecture.

If the world has been more peaceful since World War Two it is due to the farsighted international policies of the United States, not the peacekeeping of the UN. Today, fearful or jealous of America’s unique superpower status, some countries promote the UN as a counterweight to the United States. If they succeed, says Muravchik, the world will become a more dangerous place, especially for its most vulnerable citizens.

Instead of elevating the discredited political functions of the UN, as most other reform proposals aim to do, Muravchik offers a completely different formula for change: Boost the humanitarian work of the UN, and reemphasize its role as a place where sovereign nations can exchange ideas and form coalitions in the face of common concerns, while stripping it of the pretensions of world government.

Joshua Muravchik is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute studying the United Nations, neoconservatism, the history of socialism and communism, the Arab-Israeli conflict, global democracy, terrorism, and the Bush Doctrine.



Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction

1. The Birth of the UN: A Case of Thoughtless Paternity

2. After Sixty Years: Failure on Many Fronts
Keeping the Peace
Nuclear Nonproliferation
A Moral Beacon?
Human Rights
Some Nations Are Less Equal than Others
Combating Poverty

3. Some Areas of Success
Peacekeeping
Regulatory Agencies

4. Sources of Failure
The Non-Aligned Movement
European Anti-Americanism
Lack of Accountability
Serving Its Own Interests

5. Proposals for Reform: Hope Springs Eternal
Improving the UN's Efficiency
Enhancing the UN's Capabilities
Revising the UN's Political Structures
The Security Council and the United States

6. A Better Approach

Appendix A:
Which United Nations Member Countries Voted Most Often with the United States in the UN General Assembly?

Appendix B: Odd Man Out or Back Where We Started?

Appendix C: The UN's Budget: Who Pays?

Appendix D: The Commission on Human Rights: Foxes Guarding the Chicken Coop

Notes

Index

About the Author

Related Links
Book Forum
United Nations Conference Series: "United No More?"
Newt Gingrich's Senate Testimony on United Nations Reform
More from AEI on National Sovereignty and Global Governance


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