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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 12 page paper begins with a brief introduction to the United Nations, when, why and by whom it was created. The writer also provides a brief description of the League of Nations, and discusses the UN Trusteeship Council, the International Trusteeship System, and the Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples, identifying the Articles in the UN Charter that are applicable to decolonization. The 16 territories and their administrating nations are identified. Bibliography lists 12 sources.
Page Count:
12 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGundecl.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Conclusion.] Introduction Although the League of Nations, created after World War I, failed in its goal, the idea of an international organization that would work for peace did not
die (Howard, 2005). In 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt and British prime minister Winston Churchill announced the Atlantic Charter (Howard, 2005). These state leaders pledged to work towards a system
that would be effective in keeping peace in the world (Howard, 2005). Representatives of the Allies, a coalition of 26 nations who were fighting against Germany and Japan met in
1942 and signed a Declaration by United Nations (Howard, 2005). It was President Roosevelt who coined the term United Nations (Howard, 2005). In 1943, four nations, the U.S., the U.K.,
the Soviet Union and China, agreed to create an international organization (Howard, 2005). They met at the Dumbarton Oaks estate in Washington, D.C. in 1944 where they drafted the charter
for the organization (Howard, 2005). There was still disagreement about different issues, such as voting rights and membership to the new United Nations (Howard, 2005). The powers met again at
a summit in Yalta in early 1945 and ironed out their differences (Howard, 2005). Another meeting, the United Nations Conference, was held on April 25, 1945 in San Francisco, attended
by delegates from 50 nations (Howard, 2005). Two months later they had completed the charter for the UN (Howard, 2005). The United Nations was formalized on October 24, 1945 (Howard,
2005). Fifty-one nations were members (Howard, 2005). The Charter established six separate bodies in the organization: "(1) the General Assembly, (2) the Security Council, (3) the Secretariat, (4) the Economic
and Social Council, (5) the International Court of Justice, and (6) the Trusteeship Council" (Howard, 2005). One of the goals "of the UN charter was decolonization-ending the practice of colonialism"
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