Abstract
The world needs a UN 3.0. The extent and severity of global crises are such that business as usual provides no solution. Roland Rich’s Leviathan describes the necessary next version of the United Nations. It is a confident, competent, and independent organization that incorporates the world of business and global civil society as well as governments. It will certainly not have a monopoly on the use of force, but it will lead the international community through a mix of the principle of subsidiarity placing it at the apex, the application of the process of certification whereby thousands of entities are engaged in problem-solving, and the benefit of legitimacy earned through performance. The result will allow the UN to tackle the climate crisis, broaden the protection of democracy and human rights, govern globalization, and be better prepared for the next pandemic. Leviathan contains a vision but not a blueprint. Yet it does spell out how to achieve the first essential step – to clip the wings of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council.
Schlagworte
United Nations democracy human rigths international development international relations- Kapitel Ausklappen | EinklappenSeiten
- i–viii Preface i–viii
- 73–94 Peace and Security 73–94
- 143–174 Governing Globalization 143–174
- 175–192 Tackling Climate Change 175–192
- 193–212 One Billion Refugees 193–212
- 213–236 More Pandemics 213–236
- 237–260 A Vision, Not a Roadmap 237–260
- 261–270 Bibliography 261–270
- 271–286 Index 271–286
- 287–288 About the Author 287–288