Indigenous Politics and Colonial Administration with special reference to Australia

1960 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 133-149 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. Barnes

In an age of crumbling empires, when many former colonial territories are becoming politically independent, it may still be instructive to study the processes by which empires and nations have been built up. What political forms have been involved and how have they been modified and developed? The new nations of Africa and Asia now emerging have political structures that bear a generic resemblance to the established democracies and dictatorships of Europe. These forms of organization seem to be a necessary requirement for membership of the United Nations, and are widely held to be essential if there is to be a flexible industrial and commercial economy, centralized administration and widespread literacy. None of the United Nations enjoys an entirely subsistence economy or relies only on communication by word of mouth. They all have courts of law, standing armies and at least the beginnings of a bureaucracy.

2007 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-68
Author(s):  
Mary Sudman Donovan

ABSTRACTIn February 2006, women from every province of the Anglican Communion gathered in New York for the annual meeting of the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women. Once assembled, they established an organizational structure to perpetuate their gathering and called for an expanded women's presence on all Anglican Communion governing bodies. This article traces the development of the group, showing how a few women used the political structures of the Anglican Communion–the Anglican Observer at the United Nations, the Anglican Consultative Council and the International Anglican Women's Network–to assemble Anglican women. It demonstrates that the experience of meeting together became a source of empowerment for the participants and analyzes the factors contributing to the venture's success so that they might serve as models for the Anglican Communion as it struggles to maintain unity while embracing diversity.


Author(s):  
Ibrahim A. Gambari

Abstract This chapter provides a firsthand perspective on the broad issues of prevention and mediation of conflicts, with special reference to two conflict environments outside Africa—Cyprus, Myanmar—and one at its heart (Darfur), where the author was deployed as a senior envoy of the United Nations Secretary General. The aim is to provide a global view on best practice for peacebuilding in Africa against the backdrop of three fundamental shifts in conflict in the post-Cold War era: from inter- to intra-state war; from primarily state-based to non-state actors; and from largely mono- to multi-causal understandings of why wars begin and end. It provides key recommendations on improving mediation, strengthening relations between the UN and NGOs, and dealing with spoilers


1978 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 377-387

GENERAL: PRITHWIS DUTTA : Neutralism : (Theory and Practice); With Special Reference to India, Burma, Ceylon, Egypt and Ghana. GENERAL: SAURIPADA BHATTACHARYA : Pursuit of National Interests ThroughNeutralism : India's Foreign Policy in the Nehru Era. GENERAL: S.C. SAXENA: Namibia: Challenge to the United Nations. GENERAL: ALKA GUPTA: India and UN Peace-keeping activities: A Case Study of Korea, 1947–53. GENERAL: CYRIAC MAPRAYIL: Nehru and the Commonwealth. GENERAL: JAMAL KHWAJA: Quest for Islam.


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