International Organisations
Summary (English)
- Why International Organisations?
– After WWII, states realised that peace, security, and cooperation required a global institution.
– League of Nations failed; United Nations (UN) created in 1945.
– Functions: prevent wars, promote dialogue, tackle global issues like poverty, climate, and human rights.2. The United Nations (UN)
– Established 24 October 1945 with 51 members (now 193).
– Charter principles: sovereign equality, peaceful dispute settlement, human rights, collective security.Key Organs:
– General Assembly (GA): All members, one vote each; discusses issues, adopts recommendations, approves budget.
– Security Council (SC): Maintains peace. 15 members (5 permanent with veto: US, UK, France, Russia, China + 10 elected non-permanent).
– ECOSOC: Coordinates UN agencies.
– ICJ: Judicial organ in The Hague.
– Secretariat: Administrative body led by Secretary-General.
– Trusteeship Council: Now inactive (decolonisation achieved).Specialised Agencies: WHO, UNESCO, UNICEF, ILO, UNDP, IMF, World Bank, WTO, IAEA.
3. Need for UN Reforms
– Criticisms: Security Council reflects 1945, not today; Europe over-represented, Asia/Africa under-represented; veto undemocratic.
– Reforms: Expand SC membership; more developing country representation; improve transparency.India’s Case for Permanent Membership:
– Largest democracy, 2nd most populous, major economy.
– Large contributor to UN peacekeeping.
– Nuclear power and regional leader.
– Supported by many but consensus lacking.4. UN in a Unipolar World
– After Cold War, US sole superpower.
– US uses veto frequently; sometimes bypasses UN (Kosovo, Iraq 2003).
– Critics: UN too dependent on US; supporters: UN gives legitimacy and voice to smaller states.5. Other International Organisations
– WTO: Promotes free trade, resolves disputes.
– IMF & World Bank: Loans, stability, development.
– IAEA: Nuclear monitoring, non-proliferation.
– Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch: Monitor rights violations.
– NGOs like Greenpeace, Oxfam: Environment, poverty, development.6. Key Debates
– Is UN effective in preventing conflict?
– Should veto be restricted or abolished?
– How to make UN more democratic and representative?
– Can global institutions handle terrorism, climate change, pandemics?7. Key Points
– UN is the most universal, legitimate global body.
– Reforms are necessary but difficult.
– Other organisations (WTO, IMF, NGOs) also shape global governance.
– Multilateralism and cooperation remain essential for global peace and development.