from International Institutions and Global Governance Program
from International Institutions and Global Governance Program

The UN Charter

Five Pillars for Humankind

David J. Scheffer and Mark S. Ellis provide an introduction to the UN Charter and make the case that it is the most important secular document in the world.

Book
Foreign policy analyses written by CFR fellows and published by the trade presses, academic presses, or the Council on Foreign Relations Press.

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Treaties and Agreements

This book reintroduces the UN Charter to the global audience by describing the charter as the most important secular document in the world, for it is essentially the constitution of global governance to which all nations are bound, even if some honor it in the breach. The coauthors explain the core principles embedded in the charter, which embodies codified customary international law for all nations. But the book also introduces pragmatic interpretations of key charter provisions to modernize its application both today and in the future. Under the authority of the charter, such UN bodies as the General Assembly, Security Council, Economic and Social Council, Human Rights Council, and International Court of Justice address global affairs in a tough neighborhood of 193 sovereign nations. Yet relatively few people are conversant with the principles set forth in the charter.  With moral principles under siege and with the reality of divisive politics in contemporary life, the charter remains a beacon of global unity that offers a renewed sense of human progress in a turbulent world. The book explicates five core tenets of the UN Charter: human rights and fundamental freedoms, international law, economic and social progress, international peace and security, and peacemaking.

The book will appeal to the academic audience and is written in a style that will engage the general reader.

More on:

United Nations

International Law

Human Rights

Treaties and Agreements

Reviews and Endorsements

This is an extraordinary book. An excellent combination of history and future. It should definitely be used widely in educating present and coming generations about the importance of the UN and international law. It should also be read by representatives of UN member states, in particular of the P5 of the UN Security Council. It is unacceptable that all of them do not consequently perform as required by the UN Charter. 

Hans Corell, Former Undersecretary-General for Legal Affairs and the Legal Counsel of the United Nations

This is an authoritative, comprehensive, and timely work on the occasion of the eightieth anniversary of the UN Charter, by two leading experts in international human rights, humanitarian and criminal law. A must read.

Honourable Irwin Cotler, Founder and International Chair, Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights

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