
UN Reform
75 Years of Challenge and Change
Stephen Browne(Author)
Edward Elgar Publishing
Published on 8. November 2019
Book
Hardback
256 pages
978-1-78897-168-3 (ISBN)
Description
Over three-quarters of a century, the UN has been impacted by major changes in the balance of powers among its member states. This unique and insightful book offers detailed commentary on its historic effectiveness and reviews the capacity of the UN to reform and adapt to global challenges. This book constitutes a judgement on the overwhelming importance as well as the vulnerability of multilateralism at a time when the UN has never been more indispensable
This book describes:
How autocracy in the US, China and Russia constrains the UN
Why North-South politics has been a constant feature of intergovernmental debate
How the UN development system became an extended patronage system
What the UN learnt from its peacekeeping failures, and how it continues to adapt
Four areas of needed and feasible reform to restore UN credibility.
This impressive book will be vital to the staff of permanent missions of member governments to the UN, as well as UN secretariat staff. It will also benefit researchers exploring international organizations and the staff of development NGOs, as well as a broader audience of those interested in UN and global politics.
This book describes:
How autocracy in the US, China and Russia constrains the UN
Why North-South politics has been a constant feature of intergovernmental debate
How the UN development system became an extended patronage system
What the UN learnt from its peacekeeping failures, and how it continues to adapt
Four areas of needed and feasible reform to restore UN credibility.
This impressive book will be vital to the staff of permanent missions of member governments to the UN, as well as UN secretariat staff. It will also benefit researchers exploring international organizations and the staff of development NGOs, as well as a broader audience of those interested in UN and global politics.
Reviews / Votes
'Stephen Browne, himself a veteran who toiled in the UN trenches, has written an important account of the struggles within the UN to change and reinvent itself.'--Lord Mark Malloch Brown, Former UN Deputy Secretary-General'Stephen Browne has analyzed why the UN is so necessary yet such a relic. ''Reform'' has been under way since the ink dried on the Charter, yet the results are demonstrably inadequate for the problems of the second decade of the twenty-first century. Remarkable for its breadth and depth, this book could not be more timely, a compelling read for practitioners and scholars.'
--Thomas G. Weiss, The CUNY Graduate Center, US
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Cheltenham
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-78897-168-3 (9781788971683)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Stephen Browne, Founder and co-director, Future United Nations Development System (FUNDS) project, Senior Fellow, Ralph Bunche Institute for International Studies, Graduate Center, City University of New York, US, Visiting lecturer on the UN and global governance, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Switzerland
Content
Contents: Acknowledgements Foreword Introduction: What's Wrong with the UN? 1. The Growing UN Edifice 2. Peace Operations: prevention better than cure 3. Human Rights and Justice: from back to front 4. The Humanitarian Record 5. The UN in Development 6. Reviving the UN through Achievable Reform Index