A. it is authorized by a 2/3 majority of the permanent members of the Security Council
B. the nonviolent means called for in Chapter 6 have failed
C. a peacekeeping operation has been deployed and has failed to prevent the aggressor from advancing or continuing the use of violence
D. it is approved unanimously by the General Assembly
International Organization, Law, and Human Rights
International Organization, Law, and Human Rights
A. economic development, democratic government, and state sovereignty
B. human rights, reduction of poverty, and nonviolence
C. security, economic development, and human rights
D. global identity, shared culture, and human rights
A. They will not take on the mission of running the government in case of collapse
B. They do not get involved in the local politics of the troubled area
C. They entail the use of force rather than relying on the consent of all parties
D. They reject the acceptance of infrastructure development
A. has never seen even partial success
B. has been fully and successfully realized in the form of the European Union
C. has never been attempted on a national level; it has only been tried on an international level
D. has never gone beyond a partial and uneasy sharing of power between state and supranational levels
A. reducing the annual EU budget in order to lower the tax burden on EU members
B. controlling national budgets by preventing high expenditures
C. restricting membership in the monetary union
D. taxing the richer countries of the EU and distributing some of that money to poor countries
A. To draft the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
B. To organize peace keeping forces in the Congo
C. To prosecute military dictators
D. None of these options gives is correct
A. A list of economic human rights
B. The rights that all citizens hold
C. A list of indivisible human rights covering civil and political rights
D. An authoritative list of universal human rights covering civil, and political rights and economic, social and cultural rights
A. The end of the Cold War
B. The early 1950s
C. The mid-1960s
D. The mid-1970s
A. The end of World War Two following the Holocaust
B. The nineteenth century and anti-slavery campaigners
C. The civil rights movement under Dr Martin Luther King
D. None of these options given is correct
A. The liberal position on rights maintains that life liberal and property are rights that are inalienable and unconditional. The only acceptable reason for constraining one individual is to protect the rights of another
B. The liberal position on rights privileges freedoms over rights
C. The liberal position on rights says that the primary function of government is to protect the rights to life, liberty and property
D. a and c