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‘Legal powers’ make it possible for international organizations to act and in so doing to become ‘living’ entities in the legal world as well as in social reality. A ‘legal power’ is neither more nor less than the ability to perform all kind of acts, that is buying or renting a building to accommodate the organization or the adoption by an organ of an organization of sanctions against a state. In international documents and literature legal powers are also termed ‘capacities’, ‘competences’, or even ‘rights’. From a legal point of view the most important powers are those that confer on organs of an international organization the power to perform legal acts, that is the capacity to take decisions with a certain normative force; for instance the establishment by an international organization of a judicial organ for the settlement of disputes with its administrative staff, the approval of the budget by an organ of an international organization, the call of an international organization to its members to refrain from the use of nuclear weapons, the promise of an international organization to send doctors, nurses, and medical equipment to a disaster area, etc.
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