Title: The Organization of American States (OAS) The United Nations
1The Organization of American States (OAS) The
United Nations
2Monroe Doctrine
- First, it conveys that European countries cannot
colonize in any of the Americas North, Central,
or South. - Second, it enforces Washington's rule of foreign
policy, in which the U.S. will only be involved
in European affairs if America's rights are
disturbed. - Finally, the U.S. will consider any attempt at
colonization a threat to its national security.
3- In January 2005, a revolution in Haiti deposed
the dictator, Duvalier. - With Haiti in chaos, the United States intervened
to bring peace to the country. - What was the justification of the U.S for this
action?
4Roosevelt Corollary
- The Roosevelt Corollary was Theodore Roosevelts
amendment to the Monroe Doctrine. - The Corollary warranted American authority over
this in the region. Simply it was to protect the
security in Panama, where its was building a
canal, from the overpowering European nations. - The U.S. wanted their interests to be completely
out of harms way. As Roosevelt stated Chronic
wrongdoing would cause the United States to
exercise an international police power in Latin
America.
5The Organization of American States (OAS)
- Includes United States and most countries South
America. - Forms an alliance to protect the countries in the
Western Hemisphere.
6OAS- Bio
- Established April 30, 1948
- Members include Thirty Five Independent American
Countries - Headquarters in Washington, D.C.
7Goals of OAS
- To strengthen the peace and security of the
continent. - To promote representative democracy.
- To prevent and settle disputes between countries.
- To form an alliance for protection between
countries.
Headquarters in Washington DC
8Goals of the OAS (continued)
- To settle trade disputes
- To promote economic and cultural development.
- To eradicate extreme poverty
- To limit arms build-up
9The OAS
10OAS Nations
    Argentina     Bolivia     Brazil     Chile     Colombia     Costa Rica     Cuba     Dominican Republic     Ecuador     El Salvador     Guatemala     Haiti     Honduras     Mexico     Nicaragua     Panama     Paraguay     Peru     United States     Uruguay     Venezuela
11OAS Nations (Continued)
- Â Â Â Â Barbados (member since 1967)
- Â Â Â Â Trinidad and Tobago (1967)
- Â Â Â Â Jamaica (1969)
- Â Â Â Â Grenada (1975)
- Â Â Â Â Suriname (1977)
- Â Â Â Â Dominica (1979)
- Â Â Â Â Saint Lucia (1979)
- Â Â Â Â Antigua and Barbuda (1981)
- Â Â Â Â Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (1981)
- Â Â Â Â Bahamas (1982)
- Â Â Â Â Saint Kitts and Nevis (1984)
- Â Â Â Â Canada (1990)
- Â Â Â Â Belize (1991)
- Â Â Â Â Guyana (1991)
12Cuba and the OAS
- Cuba is currently excluded from the OAS due to
its Communist government. - (remember Containment?)
13The United Nations
Flag
14(No Transcript)
15History of the United NationsLeague of Nations
- When the League of Nations was formed after WW I,
the U.S refused to join. - Without the U.S, the League was very weak.
- The League was unable to prevent Hitlers
imperialism. - This led to WW II.
16Establishment of the United Nations
- The United Nations was founded by the United
Nations Charter October 24, 1945 - 51 nations signed the Charter
- The United States was the first to sign
17The Six Main Parts Of the UN
- General Assembly,
- Security Council,
- Economic and Social Council,
- Trusteeship Council
- Secretariat are based at UN Headquarters in New
York. - International Court of Justice, is located at The
Hague in the Netherlands.
18The General Assembly
- All UN Member States are represented in the
General Assembly also known as "parliament of
nations or the town hall meeting of the world - Meets once a year, usually begun in September and
lasting until December at the headquarters in New
York - Each Member State has one vote.
- Decisions on such key issues as international
peace and security, admitting new members and the
UN budget are decided by two-thirds majority.
Other matters are decided by simple majority.
19The Security Council
- Responsible for maintaining international peace
and security. - There are 15 Council members. Five of these
China, France, the Russian Federation, the United
Kingdom and the United States are permanent
members. The other 10 are elected by the General
Assembly for two-year terms. - Decisions of the Council require nine yes votes.
Except in votes on procedural questions, a
decision cannot be taken if there is a no vote,
or veto, by a permanent member.
20The Security Council (continued)
- The Council can take measures to enforce its
decisions. It can impose economic sanctions or
order an arms embargo. On rare occasions, the
Council has authorized Member States to use "all
necessary means," including collective military
action, to see that its decisions are carried
out.
21Measures taken by the Security Council
- Economic sanctions- nations who are a member of
the U.N. will stop trading with a country until
they change a certain policy. - Arms Embargo- Stop exchanging military
intelligence or weapons to nations who are going
against the UN charter
22The Secretariat
- The Secretariat carries out the administrative
work of the United Nations as directed by the
General Assembly, the Security Council and any
other organs. - The Secretariat consists of departments and
offices with a total staff of some 7,500 under
the regular budget, and a nearly equal number
under special funding. They are drawn from some
170 countries.
23The International Court of Justice
- The International Court of Justice, also known as
the World Court, is the main judicial organ of
the UN. Consisting of 15 judges elected jointly
by the General Assembly and the Security Council,
the Court decides disputes between countries. - Participation by States in a proceeding is
voluntary, but if a State agrees to participate,
it is obligated to comply with the Court's
decision.
24NATO
- The core of NATO is Article V of the NATO Treaty,
which states - The Parties agree that an armed attack against
one or more of them in Europe or North America
shall be considered an attack against them all.
Consequently they agree that, if such an armed
attack occurs, each of them, in exercise of the
right of individual or collective self-defence
recognised by Article 51 of the Charter of the
United Nations, will assist the Party or Parties
so attacked by taking forthwith, individually and
in concert with the other Parties, such action as
it deems necessary, including the use of armed
force, to restore and maintain the security of
the North Atlantic area. - Basically A huge Alliance between Europe and
North America!!
25NATO
- North Atlantic Treaty Organization
- A military alliance between the U.S., Canada, and
Europe - It was created to stop the spread of communism in
Europe and North America - Provides a common defense
26 Map of NATO countries
Membership of NATO in Europe
27Wrap-up Activity
- What is the purpose of each organization
discussed today? (OAS, UN, NATO) - Write a summary statement for each. Answers need
to include specific details! - How are they different? How are they similar?