The Hard Road to World Order
Richard N. Gardner
From Foreign Affairs, April 1974
Article preview: first 500 of 8,040 words total.
Summary: It was the best of times, it was the worst of
times." What Dickens wrote of the last quarter of the
18th century fits the present period all too well. The
quest for a world structure that secures peace, advances
human rights and provides the conditions for economic
progress-for what is loosely called world order-has
never seemed more frustrating but at the same time
strangely hopeful.
It was the best of times, it was the worst of times."
What Dickens wrote of the last quarter of the 18th
century fits the present period all too well. The quest
for a world structure that secures peace, advances human
rights and provides the conditions for economic
progress-for what is loosely called world order-has
never seemed more frustrating but at the same time
strangely hopeful.
Certainly the gap has never loomed larger between the
objectives and the capacities of the international
organizations that were supposed to get mankind on the
road to world order. We are witnessing an outbreak of
shortsighted nationalism that seems oblivious to the
economic, political and moral implications of
interdependence. Yet never has there been such
widespread recognition by the world's intellectual
leadership of the necessity for co�peration and planning
on a truly global basis, beyond country, beyond region,
especially beyond social system. Never has there been
such an extraordinary growth in the constructive
potential of transnational private organizations-not
just multinational corporations but international
associations of every kind in which like-minded persons
around the world weave effective patterns of global
action. And never have we seen such an impressive array
of ongoing negotiations aimed at the co�perative
management of global problems. To familiar phrases like
the "population explosion" and the "communications
explosion" we should now add the "negotiation
explosion."
What is "worst" about our times for those who wish for
rapid progress toward world order is clear enough. The
United Nations is very far from being able to discharge
the responsibilities assigned by its Charter for the
maintenance of international peace and security. The
willingness of U.N. members to risk their short-term
interests for the good of the community seems at the
level of the frontier town in High Noon, where the
citizens abandoned their lawman as soon as the outlaw
was released from jail. If a clear and unambiguous case
of aggression came before the Security Council or
General Assembly today, there would be little confidence
that a majority of members would treat it as such or
come to the aid of the victim. The Charter concept of
collective security is obviously dead; even for
consent-type "peace-keeping," little progress has been
made in devising agreed constitutional and financial
arrangements. Nor are the world's principal economic
forums in much better shape. In contrast to the
accomplishments of happier days, nobody now takes a
major issue to ECOSOC, UNCTAD, GATT, IMF or OECD1 with
much hope for a constructive result. Even the European
Community threatens to unravel under current economic
and political pressures.
In this unhappy state of affairs, few people retain much
confidence in the more ambitious strategies for world
order that had wide backing a generation ago-"world
federalism," "charter review," and "world peace through
world law." The consensus on basic values and
willingness to entrust vital interests to community
judgment clearly do not exist. One need only picture a
world constitutional convention including Messrs. Nixon,
Brezhnev, Mao, Brandt, Pompidou, Castro, Per�n, and
Qaddafi, not to mention Mmes. ...
End of preview: first 500 of 8,040 words total.
==================================================
[PDF]
FOREIGN AFFAIRS
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTML
THE HARD ROAD TO WORLD ORDER 561. tion policies, many of
them designed to achieve zero ..... Third, we need to
put a new emphasis on world order issues in ...
MORE:>>
======================
Here are the results for: "American Patriot"
Toward a Realistic Peace
Rudolph Giuliani
September/October 2007
... of September 11, 2001, even though Islamist
terrorists had begun their assault on world order
decades before. Confronted with an act of war on
American soil, our old assumptions about conflict
between nation-states fell away. Civilization itself,
and the international system, had come under attack by a
ruthless and radical ...
read | click for more information
http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20070901faessay86501/rudolph-giuliani/toward-a-realistic-peace.html