The League of Nations - pre-cursor to the United Nations - was founded in 1919 as a response to the First World War to ensure collective security and prevent the outbreak of future wars. It was set up to facilitate diplomacy in the face of future international conflict, but also to work towards erad
The League of Nations and the Organization of Peace (Seminar Studies)
β Scribed by Martyn Housden
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 200
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The League of Nations - pre-cursor to the United Nations - was founded in 1919 as a response to the First World War to ensure collective security and prevent the outbreak of future wars. It was set up to facilitate diplomacy in the face of future international conflict, but also to work towards eradicating the very causes of war by promoting social and economic justice. The philosophy behind much of the League's fascinating and varied roles was to help create satisfied populations who would reject future threats to the peace of their world.
In this new volume for Seminar Studies, Martyn Housden sets out to balance the League's work in settling disputes, international security and disarmament with an analysis of its achievements in social and economic fields. He explores the individual contributions of founding members of the League, such as Fridtjof Nansen, Ludwik Rajchman, Rachel Crowdy, Robert Cecil and Jan Smuts, whose humanitarian work laid the foundations for the later successes of the United Nations in such areas as:
- the welfare of vulnerable people, especially prisoners of war and refugees
- dealing with epidemic diseases and promoting good health
- anti-drugs campaigns
Supported by previously unpublished documents and photographs, this book illustrates how an understanding of the League of Nations, its achievements and its ultimate failure to stop the Second World War, is central to our understanding of diplomacy and international relations in the Inter-War period.
β¦ Table of Contents
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Publisherβs acknowledgements
Chronology
Whoβs who
Glossary
PART ONE ANALYSIS
INTRODUCTION: ORGANISING THE PEACE OF THE WORLD
1 WHAT WAS THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS?
What Was the League of Nations and Why Study it Today?
A Complicated Character: Super-State, Commonwealth, Utopia?
The Covenant of the League of Nations
Structure of the Organisation
Historiography: The League as Success or Failure?
Conclusion
2 HOW NEW WAS THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS?
Introduction: Disillusionment with the Balance of Power
Distant Origins
Nineteenth Century: The Concert of Europe and Arbitration
Nineteenth Century: Globalisation, Humanitarianism, Pacifism and National Minorities
The Legacy of War
Woodrow Wilson and the Peace Settlement
Omissions, but Optimism Nonetheless
Conclusion
3 A PROMISING START? DISPUTES, BORDERS AND NATIONAL MINORITIES IN THE 1920s
Introduction: The Spirit of the Age
Settling Disputes Peacefully in the 1920s
Assigning Territories and Drawing Borders
National Minorities: Trying to Remove a Cause of War
Conclusion
4 INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN ACTION: REFUGEES AND SECURITY
Introduction
Taking Soldiers Home, 1920β22
Flight and Repatriation: Russian Refugees, 1920β25
Exchanging Populations: Greece and Turkey
The Armenians: Suffering without a Nation State
Refugees in the 1930s
Conclusion
5 REMOVING THE CAUSES OF WAR: SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC PROJECTS
Introduction
Curing the World
The Drugs Trade
Salvaging Humans and Preventing People-Trafficking
Abolishing Slavery and its Kindred Forms
Beyond Imperialism: Mandates
Economics of Peace: Social Justice and International Stability
Conclusion: Organising Peace and Removing the Causes of War
6 THE LEAGUE BETRAYED: COLLECTIVE SECURITY IN THE 1930s AND DISARMAMENT
Introduction
Disarmament: An Impossible Quest?
Manchuria: A Turning Point for Collective Security?
The Abyssinian Crisis
Early Moves to Reappraise Collective Security: Addressing the Causes of War
Conclusion
CONCLUSION: ASSESSING THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS
A Path-Breaking Organisation
Changing Convictions
Balance
PART TWO DOCUMENTS
1 Human security
2 Different ways to prevent wars
3 Mankind is once more on the move
4 The Covenant of the League of Nations
5 Could the League have prevented the First World War?
6 βThe Geneva racketβ
7 The various degrees of self-determination
8 Beyond the bowie knife
9 Two views of the Γ
land Islands
10 Telliniβs murder
11 The Rumbold report
12 Making sense of Mosul
13 Emotion in Vienna
14 Narvaβs transit system
15 Interview with General Wrangel
16 Observing Bolshevik security
17 McDonaldβs resignation letter
18 Typhus in Poland
19 Seizing opium
20 Persian poppies
21 People-trafficking in the Far East
22 Slavery in Abyssinia
23 The Christie report
24 Progress in Rwanda-Burundi
25 Armaments and the causes of war
26 Security before disarmament
27 Lytton discusses the Mukden incident
28 Oil sanctions?
29 Haile Selassie at Geneva
30 The Bruce report
31 The Bernheim petition
FURTHER READING
REFERENCES
INDEX
Plates
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