240 research outputs found

    The Road Ahead: Gaps, Leaks and Drips

    Get PDF

    Platonism, Adaptivism, and Illusion in UN Reform

    Get PDF
    In July 2003, on the heels of the American invasion of Iraq, United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan held an extraordinary press conference. At it, he wondered aloud whether the institutions and methods we are accustomed to are really adequate to deal with all the stresses of the last couple of years. He warned that we are living through a crisis of the international system. What are the rules? he asked. Four months later he proceeded to appoint a group, the High-Level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change, to recommend ways of strengthening the United Nations so it can provide collective security for all in the twenty-first century. The High-Level Panel ( Panel ) consisted of former governmental officials and in pursuing its task met at various locations around the world. Hopes ran high that its ideas would breathe new life into an organization that needed, in Annan\u27s words, radical change. In December 2004 it issued its report, which has since become the focal point of efforts at UN reform. For a Burkean pragmatist with any sense of institutional conservation, making the most of the United Nations is a useful project. Massive amounts of capital-financial and otherwise-have been invested in the organization over the past sixty years. To the extent possible, humanity should profit from its investment. Even if the objective were merely to advance individual states\u27 national interests, the UN might be a useful tool for doing so. In any event, it is hard to fault an organization that recognizes the need to reform itself, especially one that has borne the hopes of humanity so heavily as has the United Nations. [CONT

    Making Social Cohesion or Marking the Human Security Threat? Tracing Disciplines of Place in Community-Based Services for the “Developmentally Disabled”

    Get PDF
    This paper is about how human services work people into place and how places are reworked by people. As an (auto)ethnographic research on community based services for “developmental disability”—seen as technologies for making social cohesion and development—it discusses rewards and risks when tooling knowledge to make people free

    Too Far Apart: Repeal The War Powers Resolution

    Get PDF

    Personal Autonomy in Democracy and Distrust

    Get PDF

    Too Far Apart: Repeal The War Powers Resolution

    Get PDF

    The War Powers Resolution: Sad Record, Dismal Promise

    Get PDF
    corecore