LEAGUE OF NATIONS

former international organization, established by the peace treaties that ended World War I. Like its successor, the United Nations, its purpose was the promotion of international peace and security. The League was a product of World War I in the sense that that conflict convinced most persons of the necessity of averting another such cataclysm. But its background lay in the visions of men like the duc de Sully and Immanuel Kant and in the later growth of formal international organizations like the International Telegraphic Union (1865) and the Universal Postal Union (1874). The Red Cross, the Hague Conferences, and the Permanent Court of Arbitration (Hague Tribunal) were also important stepping-stones toward international cooperation.

The Covenant: The Basis of the League

At the close of World War I, such prominent figures as Jan Smuts, Lord Robert Cecil, and Léon Bourgeois advocated a society of nations. U.S. President Woodrow Wilson incorporated the proposal into the Fourteen Points and was the chief figure in the establishment of the League at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919. The basis of the League was the Covenant, which was included in the Treaty of Versailles and the other peace treaties.

The Covenant consisted of 26 articles. Articles 1 through 7 concerned organization, providing for an assembly, composed of all member nations; a council, composed of the great powers (originally Great Britain, France, Italy, and Japan, later also Germany and the USSR) and of four other, nonpermanent members; and a secretariat. Both the assembly and the council were empowered to discuss "any matter within the sphere of action of the League or affecting the peace of the world." In both the assembly and the council unanimous decisions were required.

Articles 8 and 9 recognized the need for disarmament and set up military commissions. Article 10 was an attempt to guarantee the territorial integrity and political independence of member states against aggression. Articles 11 through 17 provided for the establishment of the Permanent Court of International Justice (see World Court), for arbitration and conciliation, and for sanctions against aggressors. The rest of the articles dealt with treaties, colonial mandates, international cooperation in humanitarian enterprises, and amendments to the Covenant.

Members

The original membership of the League included the victorious Allies of World War I (with the exception of the United States, whose Senate refused to ratify the Treaty of Versailles) and most of the neutral nations. Among later admissions to membership were Bulgaria (1920), Austria (1920), Hungary (1922), Germany (1926), Mexico (1931), Turkey (1932), and the USSR (1934). Through the efforts of Sir Eric Drummond, the first secretary-general of the League, a truly international secretariat was created. Geneva, Switzerland, was chosen as the League headquarters.

Successes and Failures

The League quickly proved its value by settling the Swedish-Finnish dispute over the Åland Islands (1920–21), guaranteeing the security of Albania (1921), rescuing Austria from economic disaster, settling the division of Upper Silesia (1922), and preventing the outbreak of war in the Balkans between Greece and Bulgaria (1925). In addition, the League extended considerable aid to refugees; it helped to suppress white slave and opium traffic; it did pioneering work in surveys of health; it extended financial aid to needy states; and it furthered international cooperation in labor relations and many other fields.

The problem of bringing its political influence to bear, especially on the great powers, soon made itself felt. Poland refused to abide by the League decision in the Vilnius dispute, and the League was forced to stand by powerlessly in the face of the French occupation of the Ruhr (1923) and Italy's occupation of Kérkira (1923). Failure to take action over the Japanese invasion of Manchuria (1931) was a blow to the League's prestige, especially when followed by Japan's withdrawal from the League (1933). Another serious failure was the inability of the League to stop the Chaco War (1932–35; see under Gran Chaco) between Bolivia and Paraguay.

In 1935 the League completed its successful 15-year administration of the Saar territory (see Saarland) by conducting a plebiscite under the supervision of an international military force. But even this success was not sufficient to offset the failure of the Disarmament Conference, Germany's withdrawal from the League (1933), and Italy's successful attack on Ethiopia in defiance of the League's economic sanctions (1935). In 1936, Adolf Hitler remilitarized the Rhineland and denounced the Treaty of Versailles; in 1938 he seized Austria.

Faced by threats to international peace from all sides—the Spanish civil war, Japan's resumption of war against China (1937), and finally the appeasement of Hitler at Munich (1938)—the League collapsed. German claims on Danzig (see Gdańsk), where the League commissioner had been reduced to impotence, led to the outbreak of World War II. The last important act of the League came in Dec., 1939, when it expelled the USSR for its attack on Finland.

In 1940 the League secretariat in Geneva was reduced to a skeleton staff; some of the technical services were removed to the United States and Canada. The allied International Labor Organization continued to function and eventually became affiliated with the United Nations. In 1946 the League dissolved itself, and its services and real estate (notably the Palais des Nations in Geneva) were transferred to the United Nations. The League's chief success lay in providing the first pattern of permanent international organization, a pattern on which much of the United Nations was modeled. Its failures were due as much to the indifference of the great powers, which preferred to reserve important matters for their own decisions, as to weaknesses of organization.

Bibliography

See F. P. Walters, A History of the League of Nations (2 vol., 1952; repr. 1960); W. Schiffer, Legal Community of Mankind (1954, repr. 1972); G. Scott, The Rise and Fall of the League of Nations (1974); F. S. Northedge, The League of Nations (1986); H. F. Margulies, The Mild Reservationists and the League of Nations (1989).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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DEVELOPMENT OF THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS IDEA THE MACMILLAN COMPANY...HOWARD TAFT DEVELOPMENT OF THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS IDEA DOCUMENTS AND CORRESPONDENCE...NEW YORK INTRODUCTION The League of Nations is steadily gaining recognition...
...1.25. 7. Roconstituting the League of Nations. J. E. Johnson. $1.25...7 RECONSTITUTING THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS COMPILED BY JULIA E. JOHNSEN...reconstituted or revitalized League of Nations is generally accorded a foremost...
TAFT PAPERS ON LEAGUE OF NATIONS THE MACMILLAN COMPANY NEW YORK...TORONTO TAFT PAPERS ON LEAGUE OF NATIONS EDITED BY THEODORE MARBURG...to Enforce Peace plan for a League of Nations, and of the Covenant of the...
THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS AND THE RULE OF LAW, 1918-1935 MACMILLAN...COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED TORONTO THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS AND THE RULE OF LAW 1918-1935...COLLEGE -vi- PREFACE A STUDY of the League of Nations must of necessity be a study both...
LEAGUE OF NATIONS AND NATIONAL MINORITIES CARNEGIE ENDOWMENT...Vladimir D. Pastuhov. No. 5. League of Nations and National Minorities: An Experi ment . By P. de Azcarate. LEAGUE OF NATIONS AND NATIONAL MINORITIES An Experiment...
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Minorities and the League of Nations in interwar Europe. by...minorities policy with which the League of Nations came to be associated, and which...Treaty was guaranteed by the League of Nations, which apparently meant that...
Oral sex and the League of Nations: the genre of faction in Grand...Moorhouses book, set around the League of Nations, provides a case study of this...on the rise and fall of the League of Nations in the 1920s and 30s. (2) They...
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...Leaders of the LWV also pioneered the development of social work as a profession and urged U.S. membership in the League of Nations. Throughout the 1930s the LWV and its leaders were frequent targets for Communist Party fronts trying to recruit...
...the Vietnam War. Through your leadership, the League has established the importance of the Vietnam War POW/MIA accounting effort. This...accounting for Americas POWs and MIAs one of our nations highest priorities. Her leadership, determination...
...Calling for a New League of Democracies...Replace the United Nations. but Such a...consequences of the intervention...precisely the United Nations universality--which the league would undo...Tharoors "This Mini-League of Nations Would Cause...
...gained power, seceded from the League of Nations, and started his treaty-breaking...him before the Council of the League of Nations, which under Chapter V of the...government prepared to return to the League of Nations, stop rearming, and resume its...
...main achievements The League of Nations lasted a little more than 20...now lasted half a century. The League of Nations did not manage to achieve its...avoid a third world war. The League of Nations concentrated all its peacemaking...
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Football: LEAGUE OF NATIONS; EIRCOM PREMIER DIVISION...Rovers. They were dismissive of us and the league," stated OGrady. "They...really well. I think the leagues a really good standard. And in terms of settling in, Ive been made...
Rugby League: West Fear the Muir Backlash; RUGBY LEAGUE OF NATIONS. WEST OF SCOTLAND have been warned to expect a backlash from...won two in a row while Muir are coming off the back of successive defeats. And West coach John Beattie said...
Volleyball: League of Nations Could Help University...University of Birminghams team of nations will find another continental...double-header in the National League Division Three North...they will get experience of the National League is by playing." Birmingham...
Football: Dump Those Boys of 66 in Favour of Our League of Nations. Byline: BRIAN READE SO footballs coming home...realise that England is currently more of a footballing League Of Nations than any other country at any other time in history...
...ENGLISHMAN WHOS HOLDING HIS OWN IN GIANLUCA VIALLIS LEAGUE OF NATIONS; NEWCASTLE V CHELSEA Wembley: Kick-Off 3pm Sky Sports2...development, hes at Stamford Bridge. Isnt endorsing Lucas league of nations the same as a turkey voting for Christmas? Au contraire...
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encyclopedia articles on: League of Nations  - 282 results

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LEAGUE OF NATIONS former international organization...See F. P. Walters, A History of the League of Nations (2 vol., 1952; repr. 1960); W. Schiffer...G. Scott, The Rise and Fall of the League of Nations (1974); F. S. Northedge, The League...
...name for the League of Arab States...to the Arab nations. The original...constitution of the league provides for...the signatory nations on education...each member nations parliament...activities of the Arab League have been its...
...independence in late 1971, the party was the nations dominant political force. In 1981 and again...Bangladesh National party (BNP), but the League won the 1996 parliamentary elections, and party leader Hasina Wazed , the daughter of Mujibur Rahman, became prime minister...
...immediately after World War II. It replaced the League of Nations . In 1945, when the UN was founded, there were 51...need for an international organization to replace the League of Nations was first stated officially on Oct. 30, 1943, in the...
...Paris. Its counterpart in the League of Nations was the International Committee...1945 and became an agency of the United Nations in 1946. It has 192 members...controversy over the insistence of the developing nations, supported by the Soviet bloc...
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