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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Contemporary Trends in the Evolution of the International Legal Norms Governing Nationalization of Property of Aliens in Underdeveloped Countries with Special Emphasis on the Juridical Implications of the Works of the United Nations

Sharew, Getachew January 1983 (has links)
Note: 5 volumes
22

Contemporary Trends in the Evolution of the International Legal Norms Governing Nationalization of Property of Aliens in Underdeveloped Countries with Special Emphasis on the Juridical Implications of the Works of the United Nations : Volume 3

Sharew, Getachew January 1983 (has links)
Note: Volume 3 of 5
23

Contemporary Trends in the Evolution of the International Legal Norms Governing Nationalization of Property of Aliens in Underdeveloped Countries with Special Emphasis on the Juridical Implications of the Works of the United Nations : Volume 4

Sharew, Getachew January 1983 (has links)
Note: Volume 4 of 5
24

Contemporary Trends in the Evolution of the International Legal Norms Governing Nationalization of Property of Aliens in Underdeveloped Countries with Special Emphasis on the Juridical Implications of the Works of the United Nations : Volume 5

Sharew, Getachew January 1983 (has links)
Note: Volume 5 of 5
25

Between hope and despair the UN observer missions of ONUCA and MINURSO /

Hama, Ayumi. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Ohio University, June, 2009. / Title from PDF t.p. Release of full electronic text on OhioLINK has been delayed until December 1, 2009. Includes bibliographical references (p. 96-99)
26

The Responsibility to Protect : An Emerging Norm Applied to the Conflict of Syria

Knuters, Simon January 2016 (has links)
Abstract   In 2005 the United Nations (UN) unanimously agreed setting up a framework for the responsibility to protect (R2P) populations facing mass death and large scale atrocities consisting of three pillars. This responsibility was primarily for states to protect their own population (pillar 1). However, the second pillar of R2P mentions the responsibility for outside actors to engage protecting populations if their home government fails to ensure this protection. This study is about the emergence of R2P and why it has failed to protect the population in the ongoing Syrian intra-state war. Applied to the case of the Syrian conflict is Amitav Acharya’s (2013) model of norm circulation which will serve as the analytical framework for this research. Furthermore, the implementation of R2P is hampered when a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) decides to veto a resolution. This study suggests that when the UNSC is unable to act to protect populations at risk of mass death, a regional organization should have the authority to respond with necessary actions, even though that action would violate the sovereignty of the third state (see Williams et. al, 2012). As to date, the emerging norm of R2P still needs further diffusion in order to reach global acceptance. This research search to continue the development of the understanding of R2P and the emergence of global norms.   Keywords: R2P, Syria, emerging norms, the United Nations
27

UN-sanctioned military intervention in intra-state humanitarian crises

Jungk, Margaret A. January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
28

From brinkmanship to coercive containment - developments in post cold war crisis management

Youngson, Patricia Anne January 2000 (has links)
This analysis examines and explains the emergent model of crisis management manifest at the end of the first decade of the post-Cold War era. The end of the Cold War heralded fundamental and widespread changes in many ways but it did not, as events continue to demonstrate, confine to history the phenomenon of international crises. Indeed, evidence suggests that the post-Cold War period has witnessed an increase rather than a decrease in the incidence of crises. However, what has changed is what constitutes a crisis, the range of responses available to those who manage them and the criteria by which a successful outcome may be gauged. Changes too are apparent in time-scales and attitudes of decision-makers. These changes are not constants in all crisis situations: moreover, their impact varies. Whilst this transition is evolutionary and incremental, it is nonetheless fundamental and real. The transition from the Cold War model of crisis management to the post-Cold War model has not been smooth or by deliberate design: it has evolved somewhat haphazardly. Using the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis as a template of Cold War crisis management, comparison and contrast is made with the three post-Cold War crises in which the major powers became entangled; the 1990-91 Gulf War, the Bosnian crisis which lasted from 1991 until 1995, and the 1998-99 Kosovo crisis. This analysis examines what has changed, whilst assessing any change in import of what has not. To do this necessitates drawing upon a variety of topics that merited detailed study in their own right. However, this paper does not seek to provide a history of UN operations, nor is it an analysis of pure strategic theory or a treatise on United States foreign policy. The most obvious differences between the two eras are to be found in the changed relationship between the United States and Russia, formerly the USSR, and consequently the significant reduction in the likelihood of global nuclear conflict. With the nuclear threshold so dramatically raised and the starkness of strategic superpower stand-off removed, other features of crises have been afforded commensurately greater prominence. Indeed the removal of restraint conditioned by the certain knowledge of mutual destruction has coincided with an increase in the incidence of crises.
29

Discerning voting patterns in the United Nations : a factor analysis of the twenty-fifth session of the General Assembly

Carr, Harold D January 2010 (has links)
Typescript, etc. / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
30

Two units on friends near and far for use on third and fourth grade levels

Sellars, Vivian Grey January 1952 (has links)
Missing pages 59-62. Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston University / The purpose of this study is to develop two units of study on world understanding and friendship, for third and fourth grade levels. Today, need for cooperative, responsible living and for teachers and pupils to gain and keep a world view, is great. Advances made in the natural sciences make it more needful that man also give his best thought and effort to the social sciences. Anthropology and recorded history trace the steps of developing man, from that early day when he found it more advantageous to live in groups, to our own day when the group has broadened to include all peoples of our planet. The watchwords of our age might well be, "United we stand," I and "On to world gover=ent." It seems quite possible that in spite or the weaknesses of the United Nations, this body may save us from another open world conflict.

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