Creating the United Nations
An International History of a World Organization
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Publishing:7th Jan '27
£21.99
This title is due to be published on 7th January, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The first international history of how the United Nations was created through an international collaboration of countries, NGOs and individuals, to understand both its original purpose and its role as a world organization today.
80 years on from the creation of the United Nations during WWII, this book offers the first international history of its establishment. Often thought as the brainchild of the United States, Andrew Erhardt shows that it was instead the result of international collaboration between a number of nation states, non-government organizations and individuals determined to build a world organization that might keep the peace in a war-torn world.
As scholars, analysts and leading statesmen question whether the UN, and international organizations more broadly, remain fit for purpose in our 21st century world, Creating the United Nations takes us back to the beginning, to understand its original purpose, genesis and ultimate design. Only with this historical understanding – one that shines light on the central as well as the forgotten voices – can we begin to discuss how the United Nations might be reformed, to assess whether new forms of regional and international organisation are needed to address recurrent and new challenges, and to examine how such systems might be brought into existence.
This richly detailed book demonstrates how the key international organization of the post-1945 order, the United Nations, emerged from the interplay of wartime planning and ideas of international order. * Dan Gorman, University of Waterloo, Canada *
ISBN: 9781350521575
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
288 pages