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India and UN, Other International Orgs & Exercises

🎓 Class 12 Social Science CBSE Theory Chapter 4 — International Organisations ⏱ ~28 min
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Class 12 · Political Science · Contemporary World Politics

India in the UN, IMF/World Bank/WTO & Other Organisations — Exercises

India joined the UN on 30 October 1945, even before its own independence. Eight decades later, India is among the largest contributors of peacekeeping troops, the most populous country, the world's largest democracy, and a leading claimant for a permanent seat. Beyond the UN, a wider family of organisations — the IMF and World Bank born at Bretton Woods in 1944, the WTO that succeeded GATT in 1995, the IAEA of 1957, and human-rights NGOs like Amnesty International (1961) and Human Rights Watch (1978) — make up the modern architecture of global governance. This concluding Part covers all of them and provides every NCERT exercise with model answers, plus a Summary and Key Terms.

4.14 India and the United Nations

India's relationship with the United Nations has been long, deep and constructive. India joined the UN on 30 October 1945 — two years before its own independence in 1947 — and has since participated in virtually every initiative the world body has launched. India's contribution falls into three areas: peacekeeping, leadership in development and human rights, and the ongoing case for a permanent UNSC seat.

4.14.1 India's Peacekeeping Record

India is one of the largest and most consistent troop-contributing countries to UN peacekeeping operations. Indian soldiers have served under the UN flag in almost every major peacekeeping mission since 1948, from the Suez Canal to Korea, from the Congo to Cambodia, from Lebanon to South Sudan. By 2024, India had taken part in nearly fifty UN peacekeeping missions and contributed approximately 290,000 troops in total — making India one of the top three peacekeeping troop contributors in UN history. 175 Indian peacekeepers have died in the line of duty, the highest sacrifice from any single contributing country.

Peacekeeping Troop Contributions — Top Countries (illustrative, recent figures)

4.14.2 India's Other Contributions

India has also been a regular financial contributor to the UN regular budget and has never faltered on its payments — even when India itself faced economic crises. India has provided the UN's leadership too: India's daughter, Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, became the first woman to be elected President of the UN General Assembly in 1953. Indian judges have consistently served on the International Court of Justice. India has been a non-permanent UNSC member eight times, most recently in 2021–22, when it presided over the Council in August 2021 and December 2022.

4.14.3 Why India Wants a Permanent Seat

India has supported the restructuring of the UN on several grounds. It believes that a strengthened and revitalised UN is desirable in a changing world. India also supports an enhanced role for the UN in promoting development and cooperation among states. India believes that development should be central to the UN's agenda as it is a vital precondition for the maintenance of international peace and security.

One of India's major concerns has been the composition of the Security Council, which has remained largely static while the UN General Assembly membership has expanded considerably. India considers that this has harmed the representative character of the Security Council. It also argues that an expanded Council, with more representation, will enjoy greater support in the world community.

India supports an increase in the number of both permanent and non-permanent members. Its representatives have argued that the activities of the Security Council have greatly expanded in the past few years. The success of the Council's actions depends upon the political support of the international community, so any plan for restructuring should be broad-based — for instance, the Council should have more developing countries in it.

📌 The Five Pillars of India's Case
India itself wishes to be a permanent member in a restructured UN. Its case rests on five pillars. (i) Population: India is the most populous country, comprising almost one-fifth of the world's population. (ii) Democracy: India is the world's largest democracy. (iii) Peacekeeping: India has participated in virtually all the UN's peacekeeping initiatives. (iv) Financial reliability: India has made regular contributions and never faltered on its payments. (v) Economic emergence: India is now the world's fifth-largest economy and a rising power.
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Indian diplomacy at the UN · 1953–present
Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit and the long Indian role
In 1953, Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit — Jawaharlal Nehru's sister — became the first woman ever elected President of the UN General Assembly. From that moment, India has been one of the most active middle-power voices at Turtle Bay, advocating decolonisation in the 1950s and 60s, the New International Economic Order in the 1970s, and a developmental, multipolar agenda in our own century.

4.14.4 The Concerns and Counter-Arguments

India is aware that permanent membership of the Security Council also has symbolic importance. It signifies a country's growing importance in world affairs. This greater status is an advantage to a country in the conduct of its foreign policy: the reputation for being powerful makes a state more influential.

Despite India's wish to be a permanent veto-wielding member of the UN, some countries question its inclusion. Neighbouring Pakistan, with which India has troubled relations, is not the only country reluctant to see India become a permanent veto member. Some countries are concerned about India's nuclear weapons capabilities. Others think that its difficulties with Pakistan will make India ineffective as a permanent member. Others argue that if India is included, then other emerging powers will have to be accommodated — Brazil, Germany, Japan, perhaps even South Africa — whom they oppose. Yet another group insists that Africa and South America must be represented in any expansion since those are the only continents not represented in the present permanent structure. Given these concerns, it may not be very easy for India or anyone else to become a permanent member of the UN in the near future.

4.15 The UN in a Unipolar World

Among the concerns about UN reform has been the hope of some countries that change could help the UN cope better with a unipolar world — a world in which the United States, after the Soviet collapse in 1991, has been the most powerful country without serious rivals. Can the UN serve as a balance against US dominance? Can it help maintain a dialogue between the rest of the world and the US, and prevent America from doing whatever it wants?

The honest answer is: not really, but partly. US power cannot be easily checked. With the disappearance of the Soviet Union, the US stands as the only superpower; its military and economic power allow it to ignore the UN or any other international organisation when it chooses. Within the UN, US influence is enormous — it is the single largest contributor (22% of the regular budget); the UN is physically located on US territory; many US nationals serve in the UN bureaucracy; and US veto power can stop any move that America finds annoying or damaging to its interests or to the interests of its allies. The US can and does use this power to "split" the rest of the world and to reduce opposition to its policies.

The UN is not, therefore, a great balance to the US. Nevertheless, in a unipolar world the UN can — and has — served to bring the US and the rest of the world into discussion over various issues. US leaders, in spite of their frequent criticism of the UN, do see the organisation as serving a purpose in bringing together over 190 nations on conflict and development. As for the rest of the world, the UN provides an arena in which it is possible to modify US attitudes and policies. The UN does provide a space within which arguments against specific US attitudes are heard and compromises can be shaped. The UN is an imperfect body — but without it, the world would be worse off.

📜 The Closing Argument of the NCERT
Given the growing connections and links between societies and issues — what we often call "interdependence" — it is hard to imagine how more than seven billion people would live together without an organisation such as the UN. Technology promises to increase planetary interdependence, and therefore the importance of the UN will only increase. Peoples and governments will have to find ways of supporting and using the UN consistent with their own interests and those of the international community more broadly.
— Adapted from Class 12 NCERT, Contemporary World Politics, Chapter 4

4.16 Other Important International Organisations

Beyond the UN itself, four big international economic organisations and two influential human-rights NGOs shape today's world. Each has its own founding story, headquarters and mandate.

4.16.1 The Bretton Woods Twins — IMF and World Bank (1944)

In July 1944, even before the war was over, delegates from 44 Allied nations met at Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, in the United States to design a new international financial system. They created two institutions that have shaped global economics ever since.

IMF · 1944 · Washington, D.C.

International Monetary Fund

An international organisation that oversees the financial institutions and regulations that act at the international level. The IMF has 190 member countries (as on 19 February 2024) but they do not enjoy an equal say. The G-7 — US (16.52%), Japan (6.15%), Germany (5.32%), France (4.03%), UK (4.03%), Italy (3.02%) and Canada (2.22%) — together hold 41.29% of the votes. China (6.09%), India (2.64%), Russia (2.59%), Brazil (2.22%) and Saudi Arabia (2.02%) are the other major members. The IMF lends to countries facing balance-of-payments crises and is sometimes called the "lender of last resort" in international finance.
World Bank · 1944 · Washington, D.C.

World Bank Group

Created during the Second World War in 1944. Its activities are focused on the developing countries. It works for human development (education, health), agriculture and rural development (irrigation, rural services), environmental protection (pollution reduction), infrastructure (roads, urban regeneration, electricity) and governance (anti-corruption, development of legal institutions). It provides loans and grants to member countries and exercises enormous influence on the economic policies of developing nations. The World Bank is often criticised for setting the economic agenda of poorer nations, attaching stringent conditions to its loans and forcing free-market reforms.

4.16.2 The World Trade Organisation (1995, succeeded GATT 1948)

WTO · 1995 · Geneva

World Trade Organisation

An international organisation which sets the rules for global trade. It was set up in 1995 as the successor to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), which had been created in 1948 after the Second World War. The WTO has 164 members (as on 29 July 2016). All decisions are taken unanimously, but the major economic powers — the US, EU and Japan — have managed to use the WTO to frame rules of trade that advance their own interests. The developing countries often complain of non-transparent procedures and being pushed around by big powers.
⚠ A Note on Names
Read carefully: the predecessor of the WTO is the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) of 1948. Sometimes the older form "Tariffs" is replaced (incorrectly) with "Trade" in colloquial usage; the NCERT preserves the official name. The WTO replaced GATT on 1 January 1995.

4.16.3 The International Atomic Energy Agency (1957)

IAEA · 1957 · Vienna

International Atomic Energy Agency

Established in 1957. It came into being to implement US President Dwight Eisenhower's "Atoms for Peace" proposal of 1953. The IAEA seeks to promote the peaceful use of nuclear energy and to prevent its use for military purposes. IAEA teams regularly inspect nuclear facilities all over the world to ensure that civilian reactors are not being used for military purposes. Its safeguards are at the heart of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (1968) regime.

4.16.4 Human-Rights NGOs — Amnesty International (1961) and Human Rights Watch (1978)

Amnesty International · 1961 · London

Amnesty International

An NGO that campaigns for the protection of human rights all over the world, founded in 1961. It promotes respect for all the human rights set out in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) and believes that human rights are interdependent and indivisible. It prepares and publishes reports on human rights. Governments are not always happy with these reports — a major focus of Amnesty is the misconduct of government authorities — but the reports play an important role in research and advocacy.
Human Rights Watch · 1978 · New York

Human Rights Watch

Another international NGO involved in research and advocacy on human rights, founded in 1978. It is the largest international human-rights organisation based in the United States. It draws the global media's attention to human-rights abuses. It helped build international coalitions like the campaigns to ban landmines, to stop the use of child soldiers, and to establish the International Criminal Court (ICC, created by the Rome Statute of 1998).

4.17 A Critique of International Organisations

International organisations are not perfect. The chapter has hinted at several critiques throughout, but they are worth gathering in one place.

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Great-Power Politics
The veto in the UNSC, the weighted votes at the IMF, and the rule-shaping role of the US-EU-Japan in the WTO all give a small number of great powers disproportionate influence.
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Western Dominance
The original architecture (1945–48) was designed in the West, and most heads of major international organisations have come from Western countries.
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Financial Imbalance
The richest countries pay the most and therefore have the most leverage. The poorest countries pay tiny shares but are most affected by the rules.
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Accountability Deficit
International civil servants are not elected; their decisions affect billions of people; yet there are few mechanisms by which ordinary citizens can hold them to account.
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Selective Action
Critics note that the UN intervenes vigorously in some crises (Libya 2011) and not at all in others (Rwanda 1994, Syria 2011 onwards), depending on great-power interests.
Slow Reform
As the UNSC reform debate shows, even widely accepted reforms can be blocked indefinitely by a single veto-holder; the world body is structurally slow to change.
DISCUSS — Imperfect, but Indispensable?
Bloom: L5 Evaluate

The NCERT closes with a now-famous line: "The UN is an imperfect body, but without it the world would be worse off." In groups of three, prepare a 200-word case for and a 200-word case against this conclusion. Pay attention to climate change, pandemics, refugees and rising US–China tensions.

✅ Pointers
For (UN is indispensable): WHO coordinated COVID-19 vaccine sharing through COVAX; UNFCCC houses the global climate negotiations; UNHCR shelters tens of millions; the ICJ remains the only forum where small states can sue great powers; the SDGs frame development for 193 countries simultaneously. Against (UN is broken): the Security Council is paralysed by the veto on Syria, Ukraine and Gaza; the WHO was caught between the US and China during the pandemic; UN reform has been blocked for 30 years; the WTO's appellate body has been crippled since 2019. Verdict that students often reach: the UN is necessary but not sufficient — necessary, because no other institution can claim universal membership; not sufficient, because real solutions still require state action and creative new partnerships (G-20, BRICS+, climate clubs).

4.18 NCERT Exercises — Complete Model Answers

The following section reproduces every NCERT end-of-chapter exercise from Chapter 4 with model answers. Use the Show Answer buttons to reveal the answers as you study.

Exercise 1 — Statements about the veto power

Q1. Mark correct or wrong against each of the following statements about the veto power.
(a) Only the permanent members of the Security Council possess the veto power.
(b) It's a kind of negative power.
(c) The Secretary-General uses this power when not satisfied with any decision.
(d) One veto can stall a Security Council resolution.

Answers:
(a) Correct. Only the five permanent members (USA, Russia, UK, France, China) have the veto.
(b) Correct. The veto is a negative power — a single negative vote by a P5 member blocks a substantive resolution.
(c) Wrong. The Secretary-General has no veto. The veto is held only by the permanent members of the Security Council.
(d) Correct. A single veto by any P5 member is sufficient to stall a substantive resolution, regardless of how the other 14 members have voted.

Exercise 2 — Statements about the way the UN functions

Q2. Mark correct or wrong against each of the following statements about the way the UN functions.
(a) All security and peace related issues are dealt with in the Security Council.
(b) Humanitarian policies are implemented by the main organs and specialised agencies spread across the globe.
(c) Having consensus among the five permanent members on security issues is vital for its implementation.
(d) The members of the General Assembly are automatically the members of all other principal organs and specialised agencies of the UN.

Answers:
(a) Correct. The Security Council is the UN organ with primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security.
(b) Correct. Humanitarian work is done by ECOSOC, the Secretariat and a wide network of specialised agencies (WHO, UNHCR, UNICEF, FAO, etc.) spread across the globe.
(c) Correct. Substantive Security Council resolutions require nine affirmative votes and the concurring votes (or at least non-vetoes) of all five permanent members. Without consensus among the P5, the resolution cannot pass.
(d) Wrong. All UN members are members of the General Assembly, but the other principal organs (Security Council with 15 members, ECOSOC with 54 members, ICJ with 15 judges) and the specialised agencies have their own selective memberships.

Exercise 3 — India's case for permanent UNSC membership

Q3. Which among the following would give more weightage to India's proposal for permanent membership in the Security Council?
(a) Nuclear capability
(b) It has been a member of the UN since its inception
(c) It is located in Asia
(d) India's growing economic power and stable political system

Answer: (d) India's growing economic power and stable political system. Among the listed criteria, this carries the most weight in international debates. Nuclear capability (a) is in fact a concern for some states because India is not a signatory to the NPT. Long UN membership (b) and being located in Asia (c) are facts but do not by themselves justify a permanent seat. India's emergence as the fifth-largest economy combined with its enduring democracy is the most powerful single argument the world is willing to recognise.

Exercise 4 — UN agency for nuclear technology

Q4. The UN agency concerned with the safety and peaceful use of nuclear technology is:
(a) The UN Committee on Disarmament
(b) International Atomic Energy Agency
(c) UN International Safeguard Committee
(d) None of the above

Answer: (b) International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Established in 1957 to implement Eisenhower's "Atoms for Peace" proposal, the IAEA promotes peaceful nuclear use and conducts inspections to prevent military diversion. Its headquarters is in Vienna.

Exercise 5 — WTO as successor to which organisation

Q5. WTO is serving as the successor to which of the following organisations?
(a) General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs
(b) General Arrangement on Trade and Tariffs
(c) World Health Organisation
(d) UN Development Programme

Answer: (a) General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). The GATT was set up in 1948 after the Second World War. The WTO replaced it on 1 January 1995 to provide a stronger institutional framework for the rules of world trade.

Exercise 6 — Fill in the blanks

Q6. Fill in the blanks.
(a) The prime objective of the UN is _____.
(b) The highest functionary of the UN is called _____.
(c) The UN Security Council has _____ permanent and _____ non-permanent members.
(d) _____ is the present UN Secretary-General.

Answers:
(a) The prime objective of the UN is to prevent international conflict, to limit the extent of hostilities when conflict breaks out, and to facilitate cooperation among states for peace, security and social and economic development.
(b) The highest functionary of the UN is called the Secretary-General.
(c) The UN Security Council has 5 permanent and 10 non-permanent members.
(d) Antonio Guterres (of Portugal) is the present (ninth) UN Secretary-General. He took office on 1 January 2017.

Exercise 7 — Match the principal organs and agencies of the UN with their functions

Q7. Match the principal organs and agencies of the UN with their functions.

Matches:
  1. Economic and Social Council → (c) Looks into the economic and social welfare of the member countries.
  2. International Court of Justice → (e) Resolves disputes between and among member countries.
  3. International Atomic Energy Agency → (d) Safety and peaceful use of nuclear technology.
  4. Security Council → (b) Preservation of international peace and security.
  5. UN High Commission for Refugees → (f) Provides shelter and medical help during emergencies.
  6. World Trade Organisation → (j) Facilitates free trade among member countries.
  7. International Monetary Fund → (a) Oversees the global financial system.
  8. General Assembly → (g) Debates and discusses global issues.
  9. World Health Organisation → (i) Providing good health for all.
  10. Secretariat → (h) Administration and coordination of UN affairs.

Exercise 8 — Functions of the Security Council

Q8. What are the functions of the Security Council?

Model Answer: The UN Security Council is the organ of the UN that has primary responsibility for international peace and security. Its functions are:
  1. Investigation of disputes: The Council can investigate any dispute or situation that might lead to international friction, and can recommend means or terms of settlement.
  2. Pacific settlement: It can call upon the parties to a dispute to settle the dispute by peaceful means — negotiation, mediation, conciliation, arbitration, judicial settlement.
  3. Collective action against aggression: Under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, the Council can determine the existence of any threat to the peace, breach of the peace, or act of aggression. It can apply economic sanctions, sever diplomatic ties, and authorise the use of armed force to maintain or restore international peace and security.
  4. Authorisation of peacekeeping: It establishes UN peacekeeping operations all over the world.
  5. Recommendation of new members: Recommends to the General Assembly the admission of new UN members and the appointment of the Secretary-General.
  6. Election of ICJ judges: Together with the General Assembly, elects the judges of the International Court of Justice.
  7. Sanctions and tribunals: Can impose sanctions and create international criminal tribunals (as it did for the former Yugoslavia in 1993 and for Rwanda in 1994).
The Council's decisions are binding on all UN member states — a unique authority no other UN organ enjoys.

Exercise 9 — Supporting India's candidature for permanent UNSC membership

Q9. As a citizen of India, how would you support India's candidature for the permanent membership of the Security Council? Justify your proposal.

Model Answer: As a citizen of India, I would strongly support India's candidature for permanent UNSC membership on six grounds.
  1. Population and democracy: India is the most populous country in the world (about one-fifth of humanity) and the world's largest democracy. No permanent voice for India means no permanent voice for almost a fifth of the world's people.
  2. Economic emergence: India is now the fifth-largest economy and one of the fastest-growing major economies. Its share of world output and trade is rising and will continue to rise.
  3. Peacekeeping record: India is one of the largest contributors of UN peacekeeping troops, having served in nearly 50 missions since 1948 and contributed about 290,000 troops; 175 Indian peacekeepers have died in the line of duty — the highest sacrifice from any contributing country.
  4. Financial reliability: India has been a regular contributor to the UN budget and has never faltered on payments.
  5. Founding member: India joined the UN on 30 October 1945, even before its own independence, and has participated in virtually all UN initiatives.
  6. Representation argument: The Security Council's static composition while UN membership has more than tripled has eroded its representativeness; an expanded Council with India will enjoy greater support from the international community.
For these reasons, I believe India's candidature is fully justified and would, if accepted, make the UN itself more representative, more legitimate and more effective.

Exercise 10 — Difficulties in implementing UN reform

Q10. Critically evaluate the difficulties involved in implementing the suggested reforms to reconstruct the UN.

Model Answer: The difficulties of implementing UN reforms are real and stubborn.
  1. The veto barrier: Charter amendments require the support of two-thirds of the General Assembly and ratification by two-thirds of UN members including all five permanent members. The P5 are unlikely to vote for any change that dilutes their privileges.
  2. No agreed criteria: Six different criteria — economic power, military power, budget contribution, population, democracy, geographic balance — have been proposed. Each criterion advantages some countries and disadvantages others, and no consensus exists on which to apply.
  3. Regional rivalries: Almost every G4 candidate has a regional rival who blocks them. Pakistan opposes India; China opposes Japan; Italy and Spain oppose Germany; Argentina and Mexico oppose Brazil. These rivalries make any deal difficult.
  4. Africa's special demands: The African Union under the Ezulwini Consensus insists on full veto rights for new permanent members — which the P5 will not accept.
  5. Disagreement on substance: Even on jurisdiction, members disagree. Some want a stronger UN role in peace and security; others want it confined to development and humanitarian work.
  6. US ambivalence: The single largest contributor often acts unilaterally and sometimes withholds payments, weakening the UN's authority and slowing reform.
  7. Slow procedures: Even the simplest changes — like winding up the dormant Trusteeship Council, agreed in principle in 2005 — have not been formally implemented two decades later.
The combined result is that even widely accepted reforms can be blocked indefinitely. Real change typically follows only major shocks (the end of the Cold War, big wars, pandemics) — not gradual debate.

Exercise 11 — Why the UN is indispensable

Q11. Though the UN has failed in preventing wars and related miseries, nations prefer its continuation. What makes the UN an indispensable organisation?

Model Answer: The UN has not abolished war — but it remains indispensable for at least seven reasons.
  1. The only universal forum: Of 195 sovereign states, 193 are UN members. No other body has anything close to that universality.
  2. Place of dialogue: Even when wars rage, hostile states sit in the same chamber. Many conflicts are resolved without going to war because the UN provides a "jaw-jaw" alternative to "war-war".
  3. Specialised problem-solving: The WHO eradicated smallpox in 1980 and coordinated the COVID-19 response. UNICEF reduces child mortality. UNHCR protects refugees. Each of these tasks would be impossible for any single nation alone.
  4. Climate, pandemics, terrorism, trade: All are transboundary. The UN provides the forum, the rules and the bureaucracy needed for cooperation.
  5. Legal architecture: The UN gave the world the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948), the Genocide Convention, the Refugee Convention, Law of the Sea, and many treaties. The ICJ resolves legal disputes peacefully.
  6. Voice for small states: In the General Assembly each member has one vote. A tiny state matters as much as a great power. No other forum gives small states this leverage.
  7. Cost of dissolution: Without the UN, the world would have to invent something very similar — and would lose seventy years of accumulated experience and trust in the meantime.
As the NCERT puts it: "The UN is an imperfect body, but without it the world would be worse off."

Exercise 12 — Reforming the UN means restructuring the Security Council?

Q12. "Reforming the UN means restructuring of the Security Council." Do you agree with this statement? Give arguments for or against this position.

Model Answer: I agree only partly with this statement. Reforming the UN does include restructuring the Security Council, but it cannot be limited to that.

Arguments in favour of the statement (UNSC reform is central):

  1. The Security Council is the only UN body with binding authority on all members. Without restructuring, the UN's most powerful organ remains a 1945 snapshot of world power.
  2. The exclusion of Africa, Latin America, large parts of Asia and the Islamic world from permanent membership undermines the UN's legitimacy.
  3. The 1992 General Assembly resolution and the 1997 Annan inquiry both placed UNSC reform at the heart of the reform agenda.
  4. Without representative reform, the UN's decisions are seen — especially in the Global South — as reflecting Western interests rather than world interests.

Arguments against the statement (UN reform is wider):

  1. Reform of jurisdiction is just as important — for instance, the Peacebuilding Commission (2005), the Human Rights Council (2006) and the Sustainable Development Goals (2015) reformed what the UN does, not how the Council is composed.
  2. Reform of finances — assessed contributions, voluntary funds and the cost of peacekeeping — directly shapes the UN's effectiveness.
  3. Reform of processes — General Assembly procedures, ECOSOC's coordinating role, and the Secretariat's administration — affects how well the UN runs.
  4. Even the specialised agencies (WHO post-COVID, IMF voting weights, WTO appellate body) need reform.
Conclusion: UN reform must include — but cannot be limited to — UNSC restructuring. A reformed Council that sits over an unreformed and underfunded Secretariat would still be ineffective. Genuine reform must address composition, jurisdiction, finance and process together.

4.19 Chapter Summary & Key Terms

📋 Chapter 4 — Summary at a Glance

  • Why international organisations: States create them to manage war and peace, to address common challenges (climate, pandemics, trade, terrorism), and to provide mechanisms (rules, information, bureaucracy) for cooperation.
  • From League to UN: The League of Nations (1920) failed to prevent the Second World War. After the war, the Atlantic Charter (1941), the Declaration by United Nations (1942), the Tehran (1943) and Yalta (1945) conferences led to the San Francisco Conference. The UN Charter was signed on 26 June 1945 and came into force on 24 October 1945, beginning with 51 founding members. India joined on 30 October 1945. Membership today: 193 states.
  • Six principal organs: General Assembly · Security Council · ECOSOC · Trusteeship Council (suspended 1994) · International Court of Justice (The Hague) · Secretariat. Antonio Guterres (Portugal) is the ninth Secretary-General since 2017.
  • Security Council: 15 members = 5 permanent (USA, Russia, UK, France, China) with veto + 10 non-permanent (2-year terms, by region). Substantive decisions need 9 affirmative votes including all P5 concurring; one veto blocks a resolution. Abstention is not a veto.
  • Reform debate: 1992 GA resolution; 1997 Kofi Annan inquiry. Four reform groups — G4 (Brazil, Germany, India, Japan), African Union (Ezulwini Consensus 2005, demands 2 perm + 5 non-perm with veto), Uniting for Consensus (no new perms), L69. P5 reluctance and regional rivalries have stalled reform.
  • India and the UN: Founding member; ~50 peacekeeping missions, 290,000 troops, 175 dead; 8 times non-permanent UNSC member. Case for permanent seat rests on population, democracy, peacekeeping, financial reliability and economic emergence.
  • Other organisations: IMF and World Bank (Bretton Woods, 1944, Washington); WTO (1995, Geneva, succeeded GATT 1948); IAEA (1957, Vienna, "Atoms for Peace"); WHO (1948, Geneva); UNESCO (1945, Paris); Amnesty International NGO (1961); Human Rights Watch NGO (1978).
  • Critique: Great-power politics, Western dominance, financial imbalance, accountability deficit, selective action, slow reform.
  • Bottom line: "The UN is an imperfect body, but without it the world would be worse off." Increasing planetary interdependence — climate, technology, pandemics — only increases the importance of international organisations.

Key Terms — Glossary

United Nations (UN)
International organisation founded on 24 October 1945 to maintain peace, promote cooperation, and uphold human rights. 193 member states. HQ in New York.
UN Charter
Founding treaty signed at San Francisco on 26 June 1945; came into force 24 October 1945. Defines the UN's purposes, organs and powers.
General Assembly
UN's main deliberative organ; all 193 members; one vote each; meets annually in regular session.
Security Council
15-member organ with primary responsibility for international peace and security; binding decisions; 5 permanent + 10 non-permanent members.
ECOSOC
Economic and Social Council; 54 members; coordinates UN's economic, social, environmental and humanitarian work and the specialised agencies.
ICJ
International Court of Justice; 15 judges; seated at The Hague; settles legal disputes between states and gives advisory opinions.
Secretariat
UN's international civil service, headed by the Secretary-General. Currently led by Antonio Guterres (since 2017).
P5
The five permanent members of the Security Council: USA, Russia, UK, France, China — selected as the WWII victors.
Veto
The power held by each P5 member to block a substantive UNSC resolution by a single negative vote. An abstention is not a veto.
G4
Group of Four — Brazil, Germany, India, Japan — that supports each other's bid for permanent UNSC seats.
Ezulwini Consensus
African Union's 2005 demand for two permanent UNSC seats with full veto rights and five non-permanent seats for African states.
Bretton Woods
1944 conference in New Hampshire that created the IMF and the World Bank as the twin pillars of post-war global finance.
IMF
International Monetary Fund (1944); oversees global financial system; lends to states in balance-of-payments crises; 190 members.
World Bank
International institution (1944) providing loans and grants for development projects in member countries.
GATT
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (1948); succeeded by the WTO in 1995.
WTO
World Trade Organisation (1995, Geneva); sets global trade rules; replaced GATT.
IAEA
International Atomic Energy Agency (1957, Vienna); promotes peaceful nuclear use under "Atoms for Peace".
Peacekeeping
UN-authorised deployment of military and civilian personnel to maintain peace in conflict zones; first mission UNTSO 1948.
Antonio Guterres
Ninth UN Secretary-General; from Portugal; former PM (1995–2002) and UNHCR head (2005–15); took office 1 January 2017.
Amnesty International
Human-rights NGO founded in 1961; researches and reports on human-rights abuses worldwide.
Human Rights Watch
US-based human-rights NGO founded in 1978; helped land-mine ban, child-soldier prohibition and ICC creation.
Unipolar World
An international order dominated by a single superpower — the post-1991 condition with the US as sole superpower.
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Competency-Based Questions — Part 3

Case Study: India joined the UN on 30 October 1945, before its own independence. Eight decades later, it is the third-largest contributor of UN peacekeeping troops, the most populous country in the world, the largest democracy, and the fifth-largest economy. Yet India is not a permanent UNSC member. Beyond the UN, the post-1944 world built a wider architecture: the IMF and the World Bank in 1944 at Bretton Woods, the IAEA in 1957 to implement Eisenhower's "Atoms for Peace", the WTO in 1995 to replace the GATT of 1948, plus human-rights NGOs like Amnesty International (1961) and Human Rights Watch (1978). Critics describe the system as Western-dominated and accountability-poor; defenders insist that "the UN is an imperfect body, but without it the world would be worse off."
Q1. Which of the following pairs is correctly matched?
L1 Remember
  • (A) IMF — 1995, Geneva
  • (B) World Bank — 1944, Washington, D.C.
  • (C) WTO — 1957, Vienna
  • (D) IAEA — 1944, Bretton Woods
Answer: (B) — The World Bank was created at Bretton Woods in 1944 and is headquartered in Washington, D.C. The IMF was also created in 1944 (also in Washington). The WTO is from 1995 and is in Geneva. The IAEA is from 1957 and is in Vienna.
Q2. Why does India have a strong claim to a permanent seat on the UN Security Council? Identify the option that includes ALL the strongest grounds.
L3 Apply
  • (A) Most populous country, largest democracy, peacekeeping record, financial reliability, growing economy
  • (B) Possession of nuclear weapons alone
  • (C) Geographical location in Asia alone
  • (D) Membership of NATO
Answer: (A) — India's case rests on five pillars: most populous country (one-fifth of humanity), world's largest democracy, near-50 peacekeeping missions, regular UN budget contributor, and the world's fifth-largest economy. India is not a NATO member; possessing nuclear weapons is in fact a concern for some states because India has not signed the NPT.
Q3. Critically analyse, in 5–6 sentences, why the United Nations is described as an "imperfect but indispensable" organisation in a unipolar world.
L4 Analyse
Model Answer: First, the UN is "imperfect" because the Security Council's veto allows great-power politics — the US, Russia or China can stall any resolution they dislike. Second, US dominance inside the system (22% of the budget, the headquarters in New York, many US nationals in the bureaucracy) means the UN cannot truly "balance" the United States. Third, the UN often appears paralysed in major crises — Rwanda 1994, Syria after 2011, Ukraine after 2022. Fourth, however, the UN is "indispensable" because it is the only universal forum, where 193 states sit together; because it does invaluable specialised work through WHO, UNICEF, UNHCR and others; and because it provides the only place where small states can routinely sit with great powers as equals. Fifth, even the United States values the UN as a forum that "modifies" attitudes through dialogue, even when it cannot constrain them. Therefore, in a unipolar world the UN cannot replace state power, but it can civilise it — which is why even its critics keep it alive.
HOT Q. The world is moving from a unipolar moment to a multipolar one — with rising China, returning Russia, ambitious India, the EU and an active African Union. Design a five-point reform agenda that you would propose for the UN to remain relevant in this new multipolar world.
L6 Create
Hint: A strong agenda might include: (1) UNSC composition — accept the G4 + 2 African seats with a 15-year veto moratorium; (2) Veto restraint — adopt the France–Mexico ACT code of conduct restricting veto in mass-atrocity situations; (3) Finance reform — recalibrate budget shares to current GDP; create a small standing peacekeeping fund insulated from political interference; (4) Pandemic and climate authority — give the WHO and the UNFCCC emergency powers like those of the Security Council, but with technical safeguards; (5) Digital and AI governance — create a new specialised agency or strengthen ITU/UNESCO to govern the digital commons, AI safety and cyber norms before great powers create incompatible systems. The exercise tests your ability to build proposals — not just describe problems.
⚖️ Assertion–Reason Questions — Part 3
Options:
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.
Assertion (A): India has supported the restructuring of the UN.
Reason (R): India believes that a strengthened and revitalised UN, with development at the centre of its agenda, is desirable in a changing world.
Answer: (A) — Both A and R are true, and R correctly explains A. India's support for restructuring is grounded in its belief that a representative, development-focused UN is essential for international peace and security in the twenty-first century.
Assertion (A): The IAEA was set up to promote the peaceful use of nuclear energy.
Reason (R): The IAEA was created in 1957 to implement US President Dwight Eisenhower's "Atoms for Peace" proposal.
Answer: (A) — Both A and R are true, and R correctly explains A. Eisenhower's 1953 "Atoms for Peace" speech proposed an international agency to share peaceful nuclear technology, which became the IAEA when it was set up in 1957 in Vienna.
Assertion (A): The World Trade Organisation (WTO) replaced the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) in 1995.
Reason (R): The WTO and the GATT were both established in 1995 at Bretton Woods.
Answer: (C) — A is true: the WTO replaced GATT on 1 January 1995. R is false: GATT was created in 1948 (not 1995) — and Bretton Woods (1944) produced the IMF and the World Bank, not the WTO or GATT. The WTO was negotiated in the Uruguay Round (1986–94) under GATT auspices.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is India's role in UN peacekeeping?

India is one of the largest cumulative contributors to UN peacekeeping. Indian troops have served in around 50 UN missions across 5 continents, with more than 200,000 personnel deployed since 1948. India deployed the first all-women UN police unit (in Liberia, 2007). Indian soldiers have made significant sacrifices in these missions.

Why does India seek a permanent UNSC seat?

India's case rests on its 1.4 billion population, status as the world's 5th-largest economy and largest democracy, the biggest cumulative contributor of UN peacekeeping troops, a nuclear-weapon power, and a major UN budget contributor. India argues that a UNSC without it cannot legitimately speak for global peace and security.

What is the IMF?

The International Monetary Fund (IMF), founded at Bretton Woods in 1944, provides short-term macroeconomic and balance-of-payments support to keep the international monetary system stable. It has 190 member states and is headquartered in Washington D.C. India had a major IMF programme during its 1991 balance-of-payments crisis.

What is the World Bank?

The World Bank, founded at Bretton Woods in 1944, focuses on long-term development finance for poverty reduction and infrastructure in developing countries. It comprises five institutions, including the IBRD and IDA, and is traditionally led by an American (while the IMF is traditionally led by a European).

What is the WTO?

The World Trade Organization (WTO), based in Geneva, was founded on 1 January 1995, replacing the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT, 1948). The WTO sets global trade rules, hosts trade negotiations, and resolves disputes through its Dispute Settlement Body. India is a founding WTO member.

What does the IAEA do?

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), founded in 1957 and based in Vienna, promotes peaceful uses of nuclear energy and inspects nuclear facilities to prevent weapons proliferation. It implements safeguards under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). India is not an NPT signatory but cooperates with the IAEA on its civilian nuclear programme.

What are Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch?

Both are leading international non-governmental organisations that monitor and report on human rights worldwide. Amnesty International, founded in London in 1961, won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1977. Human Rights Watch, based in New York and founded in 1978, publishes the influential annual World Report. Neither is part of the UN system.

Chapter 4 complete. You have covered why international organisations are needed, the founding and structure of the UN, the Security Council and the reform debate, India's role and the wider family of international organisations, plus all NCERT exercises and key terms.
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