Loading...

What's Wrong with the United Nations and How to Fix it, 2nd Edition

Share Icon

ISBN: 978-0-745-66146-9

May 2013

Polity

288 pages

EditionsPreviousNext
Description

Six decades after its establishment, the United Nations and its system of related agencies and programs are perpetually in crisis. While the twentieth century's world wars gave rise to ground-breaking efforts at international organization in 1919 and 1945, today's UN is ill-equipped to deal with contemporary challenges to world order. Neither the end of the Cold War nor the aftermath of 9/11 has led to the "next generation" of multilateral institutions.

But what exactly is wrong with the UN, and how can we fix it? Is it possible to retrofit the world body? In his succinct and hard-hitting analysis, Thomas G. Weiss takes a diagnose-and-cure approach to the world organization's inherent difficulties. In the first half of the book, he considers: the problems of international leadership and decision making in a world of self-interested states; the diplomatic difficulties caused by the artificial divisions between the industrialized North and the global South; the structural problems of managing the UN's many overlapping jurisdictions, agencies, and bodies; and the challenges of bureaucracy and leadership. The second half shows how to mitigate these maladies and points the way to a world in which the UN's institutional ills might be "cured." His remedies are not based on pious hopes of a miracle cure for the UN, but rather on specific and encouraging examples that could be replicated. With considered optimism and in contrast to received wisdom, Weiss contends that substantial change in intergovernmental institutions is plausible and possible.

The new and expanded second edition of this well-regarded and indispensable book will continue to spark debate amongst students, scholars, and policymakers concerned with international politics, as well as anyone genuinely interested in the future of the United Nations and multilateral cooperation.

About the Author

Thomas G. Weiss is Presidential Professor at the City University of New York’s Graduate Center and Director of the Ralph Bunche Institute for International Studies.

New to Edition
Fully revised and updated, taking account of recent developments in contemporary global politics
Features
  • A fully revised and updated new edition of this classic account of the inherent problems of the United Nations.
  • Charts the history of the UN through to the present day, documenting its failure to adapt to contemporary conflucts and the post 9-11 world.
  • The book is divided into two halves, analysis the structural and organizational problems of the UN, and then setting out a program of changes
  • Will be essential reading for students of politics and international relations, as well as anyone with an interest in the changing roles of intergovernmental institutions