This book examines the broad range of social, political, economic and security issues addressed by the United Nations and experts comment on strengths and weaknesses of the current system in addressing those concerns. The U.N. has a long history of ineffectively handing the world's most critical problems-such as war, terrorism, genocide, poverty and pandemics-and scholars discuss ways to fundamentally reform the current international system to maximize international efforts to address global problems.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
The United States has a large foreign policy tool box. The U.N. is just one implement. But there are times the U.N. can be very useful. Therefore the serious discussion of the U.N.'s mischief and promise in ConUNdrum is worthwhile reading for foreign policy scholars and practitioners. It contains many hard earned insights and ideas for reform. -- Richard S. Williamson, Assistant to the President for Intergovernmental Affairs 'Multilateralism' is the buzzword of the Obama Administration's foreign policy. In this wide-ranging collection of essays, America's leading experts on multilateralism-John Bolton, David Rivkin, and Kim Holmes among them-explain the uses and, more often, misuses of multilateralism as a tool of American statecraft. Invaluable. -- Bret Stephens, foreign affairs columnist, Wall Street Journal ConUNdrum offers not only a smart analysis of how to think about the U.N. but also fresh ideas for how to help reform it to better advance peace and security, human rights and prosperity-all core American interests. -- Peter Brooks, former deputy assistant secretary of defense * Townhall, October 2009 * Conundrum advocates smarter global engagement, using the U.N. when possible and seeking alternatives when necessary. A worthy volume..... * The Washington Times, December 2009 * A timely analysis of the UN's past and present effectiveness, which postulates how that reform may take place. Despite its reformative emphasis, the authors of the ten essays in ConUNdrum have thankfully avoided merely pointing the finger at UN officials. . . . ConUNdrum is a provocative book. It needs to be. * Rusi, March 2010 * Conundrum advocates smarter global engagement, using the U.N. when possible and seeking alternatives when necessary.
A worthy volume. * The Washington Times, December 2009 * Kim Holmes makes a striking contribution....One theme that unites the volume is the need for the United States to work more closely with other democracies inside and outside the UN to isolate despotic states while giving greater voice to the American values of markets and freedom. * Foreign Affairs * Here is the most practical and constructive array of proposals for U.N. betterment yet produced. Many of the best ideas don't stand a chance of getting through those Member States who thrive on bad international bureaucracy and can block reform. But every page of this volume can be cited to encourage U.N. improvement or shame the entrenched defenders of the status quo. This is no hatchet job but the most responsible collection of fresh ideas for the World Organization ever gathered between two covers. -- Charles Hill, Diplomat-in-residence and lecturer in international studies, Yale University
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Maße
Höhe: 240 mm
Breite: 162 mm
Dicke: 26 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-4422-0006-7 (9781442200067)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Brett D. Schaefer is the Jay Kingham Research Fellow for International Regulatory Affairs at the Heritage Foundation.
Foreword: The Key to Changing the United Nations System
Introduction
Chapter 1. Smart Multilateralism: When and When Not to Rely on the United Nations
Chapter 2. Making Law: The United Nation's Role in Formulating and Enforcing International Law
Chapter 3. Mission Improbable: International Interventions, the United Nations, and the Challenge of Conflict Resolution
Chapter 4. Dysfunction in International Environmental Policy: How the U.N. Undermines Effective Solutions
Chapter 5. Human Wrongs: Why the U.N. Is Ill-Equipped to Champion Human Rights
Chapter 6. The Quest for Happiness: How the U.N.'s Advocacy of Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights Undermines Liberty and Opportunity
Chapter 7. The United Nations and Development: Grand Aims, Modest Results
Chapter 8. Promoting Free Trade through the United Nations
Chapter 9. Restoring the Role of the Nation-State System in Arms Control and Disarmament
Chapter 10. Curing the International Health System
Conclusion: The United Nations-Neither Irrelevant nor Indispensable