Law and Practice of the United Nations: Documents and Commentary combines primary materials with expert commentary demonstrating the interaction between law and practice in the UN organization, as well as the possibilities and limitations of multilateral institutions in general. Each chapter begins with a short introductory essay describing how the documents that ensue illustrate a set of legal, institutional, and political issues relevant to the practice of diplomacy and the development of public international law through the United Nations. Each chapter also includes questions to guide discussion of the primary materials, and a brief bibliography to facilitate further research on the subject.
This second edition addresses the most challenging issues confronting the United Nations and the global community today, from terrorism to climate change, from poverty to nuclear proliferation. New features include hypothetical fact scenarios to test the understanding of concepts in each chapter. This edition contains expanded author commentary, while maintaining the focus on primary materials. Such materials enable a realistic presentation of the work of international diplomacy: the negotiation, interpretation and application of such texts are an important part of what actually takes place at the United Nations and other international organizations.
This work is ideal for courses on the United Nations or International Organizations, taught in both law and international relations programs.
Preface to the Second Edition
Introduction
Part I - Relevance Chapter 1 The UN Charter Chapter 2 Hard Cases Chapter 3 Hard Choices
Part II - Capacity Chapter 4: Legal Status Chapter 5 The Secretary-General and the Secretariat Chapter 6 Membership Chapter 7 Structure, Financing, and Administration
PART III - Practice Chapter 8 Counter-Terrorism and Nuclear Non-Proliferation Chapter 9 Peace Operations Chalé