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Institutional history and arrangements Institutional history and arrangements
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The Collapse of the War Coalition, the Bipolar Division of the World, and the Recent Acceptance of Military Force The Collapse of the War Coalition, the Bipolar Division of the World, and the Recent Acceptance of Military Force
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The Legacy of the Cold War in Relation to the Protection of Human Rights The Legacy of the Cold War in Relation to the Protection of Human Rights
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The Legacy of the Cold War in Terms of Collective International Security The Legacy of the Cold War in Terms of Collective International Security
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Conclusion: The Dual Nature of the Cold War Legacy Conclusion: The Dual Nature of the Cold War Legacy
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Further Reading Further Reading
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28 The United Nations, the Cold War, and Its Legacy
Get accessGerd Hankel is Senior Research Fellow and Lecturer in International Public and International Criminal Law at the Hamburg Institute for Social Research. His publications include contributions to Antonio Cassese (ed.), The Oxford Companion to International Criminal Justice (2009), and ‘Rwanda. A Small Nation in Africa’, in Madelon de Keizer and Ismee Tames (eds), Small Nations: Crisis and Confrontation in the Twentieth Century (2008).
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Published:18 September 2012
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Abstract
According to the Preamble of the Charter of the United Nations, the member states of this organization resolved ‘to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war’ as well as to act in a way that demonstrates ‘faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person’. As demonstrated by the emergence and consolidation of the Cold War, the reality of the situation was very different. The two superpowers (USA and Soviet Union) pursued their own agendas based on their respective power politics. For the most part, the United Nations watched helplessly from the sidelines. The states were meticulous in their efforts to ensure that the United Nations was not allocated any powers that could have led to any appreciable infringement of their sovereignty.
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