Reference Text
Time Left10:00
The
United
Nations
(UN)
is
an
intergovernmental
organization
tasked
to
promote
international
co-operation
and
to
create
and
maintain
international
order.
A
replacement
for
the
ineffective
League
of
Nations,
the
organization
was
established
on
24
October
1945
after
World
War
II
with
the
aim
of
preventing
another
such
conflict.
At
its
founding,
the
UN
had
51
member
states;
there
are
now
193.
The
headquarters
of
the
UN
is
in
Manhattan,
New
York
City,
and
is
subject
to
extraterritoriality.
Further
main
offices
are
situated
in
Geneva,
Nairobi,
and
Vienna.
The
organization
is
financed
by
assessed
and
voluntary
contributions
from
its
member
states.
Its
objectives
include
maintaining
international
peace
and
security,
promoting
human
rights,
fostering
social
and
economic
development,
protecting
the
environment,
and
providing
humanitarian
aid
in
cases
of
famine,
natural
disaster,
and
armed
conflict.
The
UN
is
the
largest,
most
familiar,
most
internationally
represented
and
most
powerful
intergovernmental
organization
in
the
world.
The
UN
Charter
was
drafted
at
a
conference
between
April–June
1945
in
San
Francisco,
and
was
signed
on
26
June
1945
at
the
conclusion
of
the
conference;
this
charter
took
effect
on
24
October
1945,
and
the
UN
began
operation.
The
UN's
mission
to
preserve
world
peace
was
complicated
in
its
early
decades
by
the
Cold
War
between
the
United
States
and
Soviet
Union
and
their
respective
allies.
The
organization
participated
in
major
actions
in
Korea
and
the
Congo,
as
well
as
approving
the
creation
of
the
Israeli
state
in
1947.
The
organization's
membership
grew
significantly
following
widespread
decolonization
in
the
1960s,
and
by
the
1970s
its
budget
for
economic
and
social
development
programmes
far
outstripped
its
spending
on
peacekeeping.
After
the
end
of
the
Cold
War,
the
UN
took
on
major
military
and
peacekeeping
missions
across
the
world
with
varying
degrees
of
success.
the
General
Assembly
(the
main
deliberative
assembly);
the
Security
Council
(for
deciding
certain
resolutions
for
peace
and
security);
the
Economic
and
Social
Council
(ECOSOC;
for
promoting
international
economic
and
social
co-operation
and
development);
the
Secretariat
(for
providing
studies,
information,
and
facilities
needed
by
the
UN);
the
International
Court
of
Justice
(the
primary
judicial
organ);
and
the
UN
Trusteeship
Council
(inactive
since
1994).
UN
System
agencies
include
the
World
Bank
Group,
the
World
Health
Organization,
the
World
Food
Programme,
UNESCO,
and
UNICEF.
The
UN's
most
prominent
officer
is
the
Secretary-General,
an
office
held
by
Portuguese
politician
and
diplomat
António
Guterres
since
2017.
Non-governmental
organizations
may
be
granted
consultative
status
with
ECOSOC
and
other
agencies
to
participate
in
the
UN's
work.
The
organization
won
the
Nobel
Peace
Prize
in
2001,
and
a
number
of
its
officers
and
agencies
have
also
been
awarded
the
prize.
Other
evaluations
of
the
UN's
effectiveness
have
been
mixed.
Some
commentators
believe
the
organization