Indian & World Geography·Core Concepts

United Nations — Core Concepts

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Version 1Updated 5 Mar 2026

Core Concepts

The United Nations, established in 1945 with 51 founding members (now 193), serves as the world's primary international organization for maintaining peace, security, and international cooperation. Its six main organs include the General Assembly (all members, equal representation), Security Council (15 members, 5 permanent with veto power), Economic and Social Council, Trusteeship Council (inactive), International Court of Justice, and Secretariat.

India, a founding member, is the largest contributor to UN peacekeeping with over 200,000 troops deployed across 49 missions since 1950. The country seeks permanent Security Council membership through the G4 alliance (India, Brazil, Germany, Japan), facing opposition from the 'Coffee Club' led by Pakistan.

Key UN specialized agencies include WHO, UNESCO, UNICEF, ILO, WFP, and financial institutions like IMF and World Bank. The UN Charter establishes fundamental principles including sovereign equality, peaceful dispute settlement, and prohibition of force except in self-defense.

India's UN engagement reflects its non-aligned heritage and strategic autonomy, emphasizing multilateralism, South-South cooperation, and reformed global governance. Current challenges include Security Council reform, climate action through UNFCCC and Paris Agreement, counter-terrorism cooperation, and responding to conflicts like Ukraine where veto power limits effectiveness.

The organization's evolution from Cold War paralysis to expanded peacekeeping, development focus through SDGs, and humanitarian intervention concepts demonstrates adaptation to changing global realities while maintaining core peace and security mandate.

Important Differences

vs League of Nations

AspectThis TopicLeague of Nations
MembershipUniversal membership - 193 countries including all major powersLimited membership - US never joined, Germany and USSR joined late, Japan and Italy withdrew
Enforcement PowerSecurity Council can authorize force, impose sanctions, establish peacekeepingRelied on moral pressure and economic sanctions, no military enforcement mechanism
Decision MakingSecurity Council with P5 veto power, General Assembly majority votingAssembly required unanimity for important decisions, making action difficult
Scope of ActivitiesComprehensive system covering peace, security, development, human rights, environmentPrimarily focused on peace and security with limited functional scope
Institutional StructureSix main organs plus extensive specialized agency systemSimple structure with Assembly, Council, and Permanent Court
The UN was designed to overcome the League of Nations' fundamental weaknesses through universal membership, effective enforcement mechanisms, and comprehensive scope. While the UN has achieved greater longevity and impact, it faces similar challenges of great power politics and institutional constraints. The League's failure provided crucial lessons for UN founders, particularly the importance of including major powers and having credible enforcement capabilities.

vs BRICS

AspectThis TopicBRICS
Membership BasisUniversal membership open to all sovereign statesExclusive grouping of five major emerging economies (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa)
Institutional StructureFormal institutional structure with Charter, permanent organs, and legal personalityInformal cooperation mechanism with annual summits and sectoral meetings
Mandate ScopeComprehensive mandate covering peace, security, development, human rights, environmentFocus on economic cooperation, development finance, and reforming global governance
Decision MakingComplex voting procedures with Security Council veto systemConsensus-based decision making among equal partners
Global RepresentationRepresents all regions and development levelsRepresents emerging economies and Global South perspective
The UN and BRICS represent different approaches to multilateralism - the UN as a universal, institutionalized system versus BRICS as a flexible, issue-specific grouping. BRICS emerged partly due to dissatisfaction with UN and Bretton Woods institutions' responsiveness to emerging economy needs. India uses both platforms complementarily, leveraging BRICS for economic cooperation and alternative institutions while pursuing UN reform for greater global influence.
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