fbpx
Wikipedia

League of Nations

The League of Nations (French: Société des Nations [sɔsjete de nɑsjɔ̃]) was the first worldwide intergovernmental organisation whose principal mission was to maintain world peace.[1] It was founded on 10 January 1920 by the Paris Peace Conference that ended the First World War. The main organization ceased operations on 20 April 1946 but many of its components were relocated into the new United Nations.

League of Nations
Société des Nations
1920–1946
Anachronous world map showing member states of the League during its 26-year history
StatusIntergovernmental organisation
HeadquartersGeneva[a]
Common languagesFrench and English
Secretary-General 
• 1920–1933
Sir Eric Drummond
• 1933–1940
Joseph Avenol
• 1940–1946
Seán Lester
Deputy Secretary-General 
• 1919–1923
Jean Monnet
• 1923–1933
Joseph Avenol
• 1937–1940
Seán Lester
Historical eraInterwar period
10 January 1920
• First meeting
16 January 1920
• Dissolved
20 April 1946
Preceded by
Succeeded by
  1. ^ The headquarters were based from 1 November 1920 in the Palais Wilson in Geneva, Switzerland, and from 17 February 1936 in the purpose built Palace of Nations, also in Geneva.

The League's primary goals were stated in its Covenant. They included preventing wars through collective security and disarmament and settling international disputes through negotiation and arbitration.[2] Its other concerns included labour conditions, just treatment of native inhabitants, human and drug trafficking, the arms trade, global health, prisoners of war, and protection of minorities in Europe.[3] The Covenant of the League of Nations was signed on 28 June 1919 as Part I of the Treaty of Versailles, and it became effective with the rest of the Treaty on 10 January 1920. The first meeting of the Council of the League took place on 16 January 1920, and the first meeting of Assembly of the League took place on 15 November 1920. In 1919, U.S. president Woodrow Wilson won the Nobel Peace Prize for his role as the leading architect of the League.

The diplomatic philosophy behind the League represented a fundamental shift from the preceding hundred years. The League lacked its own armed force and depended on the victorious Allies of World War I (Britain, France, Italy and Japan were the permanent members of the Executive Council) to enforce its resolutions, keep to its economic sanctions, or provide an army when needed. The Great Powers were often reluctant to do so. Sanctions could hurt League members, so they were reluctant to comply with them. During the Second Italo-Ethiopian War, when the League accused Italian soldiers of targeting International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement medical tents, Benito Mussolini responded that "the League is very well when sparrows shout, but no good at all when eagles fall out."[4]

At its greatest extent from 28 September 1934 to 23 February 1935, it had 58 members. After some notable successes and some early failures in the 1920s, the League ultimately proved incapable of preventing aggression by the Axis powers in the 1930s. The credibility of the organization was weakened by the fact that the United States never joined, and Japan, Italy, Germany and Spain quit. The Soviet Union joined late and was expelled after invading Finland.[5][6][7][8] The onset of the Second World War in 1939 showed that the League had failed its primary purpose; it was inactive until its abolition. The League lasted for 26 years; the United Nations (UN) replaced it in 1946 and inherited several agencies and organisations founded by the League.

Current scholarly consensus views that, even though the League failed to achieve its main goal of world peace, it did manage to build new roads towards expanding the rule of law across the globe; strengthened the concept of collective security, giving a voice to smaller nations; helped to raise awareness to problems like epidemics, slavery, child labour, colonial tyranny, refugee crises and general working conditions through its numerous commissions and committees; and paved the way for new forms of statehood, as the mandate system put the colonial powers under international observation.[9] Professor David Kennedy portrays the League as a unique moment when international affairs were "institutionalised", as opposed to the pre–First World War methods of law and politics.[10]

Origins

Background

 
The 1864 Geneva Convention, one of the earliest formulations of international law

The concept of a peaceful community of nations had been proposed as early as 1795, when Immanuel Kant's Perpetual Peace: A Philosophical Sketch[11] outlined the idea of a league of nations to control conflict and promote peace between states.[12] Kant argued for the establishment of a peaceful world community, not in a sense of a global government, but in the hope that each state would declare itself a free state that respects its citizens and welcomes foreign visitors as fellow rational beings, thus promoting peaceful society worldwide.[13] International co-operation to promote collective security originated in the Concert of Europe that developed after the Napoleonic Wars in the 19th century in an attempt to maintain the status quo between European states and so avoid war.[14][15]

By 1910, international law developed, with the first Geneva Conventions establishing laws dealing with humanitarian relief during wartime, and the international Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 governing rules of war and the peaceful settlement of international disputes.[16][17] Theodore Roosevelt at the acceptance for his Nobel Prize in 1910, said: "it would be a masterstroke if those great powers honestly bent on peace would form a League of Peace."[18]

One small forerunner of the League of Nations, the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU), was formed by the peace activists William Randal Cremer and Frédéric Passy in 1889 (and is currently still in existence as an international body with a focus on the various elected legislative bodies of the world). The IPU was founded with an international scope, with a third of the members of parliaments (in the 24 countries that had parliaments) serving as members of the IPU by 1914. Its foundational aims were to encourage governments to solve international disputes by peaceful means. Annual conferences were established to help governments refine the process of international arbitration. Its structure was designed as a council headed by a president, which would later be reflected in the structure of the League.[19]

Plans and proposals

 
Lord Bryce, one of the earliest advocates for a League of Nations

At the start of the First World War, the first schemes for an international organisation to prevent future wars began to gain considerable public support, particularly in Great Britain and the United States. Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson, a British political scientist, coined the term "League of Nations" in 1914 and drafted a scheme for its organisation. Together with Lord Bryce, he played a leading role in the founding of the group of internationalist pacifists known as the Bryce Group, later the League of Nations Union.[20] The group became steadily more influential among the public and as a pressure group within the then-governing Liberal Party. In Dickinson's 1915 pamphlet After the War he wrote of his "League of Peace" as being essentially an organisation for arbitration and conciliation. He felt that the secret diplomacy of the early twentieth century had brought about war, and thus, could write that, "the impossibility of war, I believe, would be increased in proportion as the issues of foreign policy should be known to and controlled by public opinion." The 'Proposals' of the Bryce Group were circulated widely, both in England and the US, where they had a profound influence on the nascent international movement.[21]

In January 1915, a peace conference directed by Jane Addams was held in the neutral United States. The delegates adopted a platform calling for creation of international bodies with administrative and legislative powers to develop a "permanent league of neutral nations" to work for peace and disarmament.[22] Within months, a call was made for an international women's conference to be held in The Hague. Coordinated by Mia Boissevain, Aletta Jacobs and Rosa Manus, the congress, which opened on 28 April 1915[23] was attended by 1,136 participants from neutral nations,[24] and resulted in the establishment of an organization which would become the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF).[25] At the close of the conference, two delegations of women were dispatched to meet European heads of state over the next several months. They secured agreement from reluctant foreign ministers, who overall felt that such a body would be ineffective, but agreed to participate in or not impede creation of a neutral mediating body, if other nations agreed and if President Woodrow Wilson would initiate a body. In the midst of the War, Wilson refused.[26][27]

 
The League to Enforce Peace published this full-page promotion in The New York Times on Christmas Day 1918.[28] It resolved that the League "should ensure peace by eliminating causes of dissension, by deciding controversies by peaceable means, and by uniting the potential force of all the members as a standing menace against any nation that seeks to upset the peace of the world".[28]

In 1915, a similar body to the Bryce Group was set up in the United States led by former president William Howard Taft. It was called the League to Enforce Peace.[29] It advocated the use of arbitration in conflict resolution and the imposition of sanctions on aggressive countries. None of these early organisations envisioned a continuously functioning body; with the exception of the Fabian Society in England, they maintained a legalistic approach that would limit the international body to a court of justice. The Fabians were the first to argue for a "council" of states, necessarily the Great Powers, who would adjudicate world affairs, and for the creation of a permanent secretariat to enhance international co-operation across a range of activities.[30]

In the course of the diplomatic efforts surrounding World War I, both sides had to clarify their long-term war aims. By 1916 in Britain, fighting on the side of the Allies, and in the neutral United States, long-range thinkers had begun to design a unified international organisation to prevent future wars. Historian Peter Yearwood argues that when the new coalition government of David Lloyd George took power in December 1916, there was widespread discussion among intellectuals and diplomats of the desirability of establishing such an organisation. When Lloyd George was challenged by Wilson to state his position with an eye on the postwar situation, he endorsed such an organisation. Wilson himself included in his Fourteen Points in January 1918 a "league of nations to ensure peace and justice." British foreign secretary, Arthur Balfour, argued that, as a condition of durable peace, "behind international law, and behind all treaty arrangements for preventing or limiting hostilities, some form of international sanction should be devised which would give pause to the hardiest aggressor."[31]

The war had had a profound impact, affecting the social, political and economic systems of Europe and inflicting psychological and physical damage.[32] Several empires collapsed: first the Russian Empire in February 1917, followed by the German Empire, Austro-Hungarian Empire and Ottoman Empire. Anti-war sentiment rose across the world; the First World War was described as "the war to end all wars",[33] and its possible causes were vigorously investigated. The causes identified included arms races, alliances, militaristic nationalism, secret diplomacy, and the freedom of sovereign states to enter into war for their own benefit. One proposed remedy was the creation of an international organisation whose aim was to prevent future war through disarmament, open diplomacy, international co-operation, restrictions on the right to wage war, and penalties that made war unattractive.[34]

In London Balfour commissioned the first official report into the matter in early 1918, under the initiative of Lord Robert Cecil. The British committee was finally appointed in February 1918. It was led by Walter Phillimore (and became known as the Phillimore Committee), but also included Eyre Crowe, William Tyrrell, and Cecil Hurst.[20] The recommendations of the so-called Phillimore Commission included the establishment of a "Conference of Allied States" that would arbitrate disputes and impose sanctions on offending states. The proposals were approved by the British government, and much of the commission's results were later incorporated into the Covenant of the League of Nations.[35]

The French also drafted a much more far-reaching proposal in June 1918; they advocated annual meetings of a council to settle all disputes, as well as an "international army" to enforce its decisions.[35]

 
On his December 1918 trip to Europe, Woodrow Wilson gave speeches that "reaffirmed that the making of peace and the creation of a League of Nations must be accomplished as one single objective".[36]

American President Woodrow Wilson instructed Edward M. House to draft a US plan which reflected Wilson's own idealistic views (first articulated in the Fourteen Points of January 1918), as well as the work of the Phillimore Commission. The outcome of House's work and Wilson's own first draft proposed the termination of "unethical" state behaviour, including forms of espionage and dishonesty. Methods of compulsion against recalcitrant states would include severe measures, such as "blockading and closing the frontiers of that power to commerce or intercourse with any part of the world and to use any force that may be necessary..."[35]

The two principal drafters and architects of the covenant of the League of Nations[37] were the British politician Lord Robert Cecil and the South African statesman Jan Smuts. Smuts' proposals included the creation of a council of the great powers as permanent members and a non-permanent selection of the minor states. He also proposed the creation of a mandate system for captured colonies of the Central Powers during the war. Cecil focused on the administrative side and proposed annual council meetings and quadrennial meetings for the Assembly of all members. He also argued for a large and permanent secretariat to carry out the League's administrative duties.[35][38][39]

According to Patricia Clavin, Lord Cecil and the British continued their leadership of the development of a rules-based global order into the 1920s and 1930s, with a primary focus on the League of Nations. The British goal was to systematize and normalize the economic and social relations between states, markets, and civil society. They gave priority to business and banking issues,[40] but also considered the needs of ordinary women, children and the family as well.[41] They moved beyond high-level intellectual discussions, and set up local organizations to support the League. The British were particularly active in setting up junior branches for secondary students.[42]

The League of Nations was relatively more universal and inclusive in its membership and structure than previous international organisations, but the organisation enshrined racial hierarchy by curtailing the right to self-determination and prevented decolonization.[43]

Establishment

 
The first meeting of the Council took place on 16 January 1920 in the Salle de l'Horloge at the Quai d'Orsay in Paris.

At the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, Wilson, Cecil and Smuts all put forward their draft proposals. After lengthy negotiations between the delegates, the HurstMiller draft was finally produced as a basis for the Covenant.[44] After more negotiation and compromise, the delegates finally approved of the proposal to create the League of Nations (French: Société des Nations, German: Völkerbund) on 25 January 1919.[45] The final Covenant of the League of Nations was drafted by a special commission, and the League was established by Part I of the Treaty of Versailles, signed on 28 June 1919.[46][47]

French women's rights advocates invited international feminists to participate in a parallel conference to the Paris Conference in hopes that they could gain permission to participate in the official conference.[48] The Inter-Allied Women's Conference asked to be allowed to submit suggestions to the peace negotiations and commissions and were granted the right to sit on commissions dealing specifically with women and children.[49][50] Though they asked for enfranchisement and full legal protection under the law equal with men,[48] those rights were ignored.[51] Women won the right to serve in all capacities, including as staff or delegates in the League of Nations organization.[52] They also won a declaration that member nations should prevent trafficking of women and children and should equally support humane conditions for children, women and men labourers.[53] At the Zürich Peace Conference held between 17 and 19 May 1919, the women of the WILPF condemned the terms of the Treaty of Versailles for both its punitive measures, as well as its failure to provide for condemnation of violence and exclusion of women from civil and political participation.[51] Upon reading the Rules of Procedure for the League of Nations, Catherine Marshall, a British suffragist, discovered that the guidelines were completely undemocratic and they were modified based on her suggestion.[54]

The League would be made up of a General Assembly (representing all member states), an Executive Council (with membership limited to major powers), and a permanent secretariat. Member states were expected to "respect and preserve as against external aggression" the territorial integrity of other members and to disarm "to the lowest point consistent with domestic safety." All states were required to submit complaints for arbitration or judicial inquiry before going to war.[20] The Executive Council would create a Permanent Court of International Justice to make judgements on the disputes.

 
In 1924, the headquarters of the League was named "Palais Wilson", after Woodrow Wilson, who was credited as the "Founder of the League of Nations."

Despite Wilson's efforts to establish and promote the League, for which he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in October 1919,[55] the United States never joined. Senate Republicans led by Henry Cabot Lodge wanted a League with the reservation that only Congress could take the U.S. into war. Lodge gained a majority of Senators and Wilson refused to allow a compromise. The Senate voted on the ratification on 19 March 1920, and the 49–35 vote fell short of the needed 2/3 majority.[56]

The League held its first council meeting in Paris on 16 January 1920, six days after the Versailles Treaty and the Covenant of the League of Nations came into force.[57] On 1 November 1920, the headquarters of the League was moved from London to Geneva, where the first General Assembly was held on 15 November 1920.[58][59] The Palais Wilson on Geneva's western lakeshore, named after Woodrow Wilson, was the League's first permanent home.

Mission

The covenant had ambiguities, as Carole Fink points out. There was not a good fit between Wilson's "revolutionary conception of the League as a solid replacement for a corrupt alliance system, a guardian of international order, and protector of small states," versus Lloyd George's desire for a "cheap, self-enforcing, peace, such as had been maintained by the old and more fluid Concert of Europe."[60] Furthermore, the League, according to Carole Fink, was, "deliberately excluded from such great-power prerogatives as freedom of the seas and naval disarmament, the Monroe Doctrine and the internal affairs of the French and British empires, and inter-Allied debts and German reparations, not to mention the Allied intervention and the settlement of borders with Soviet Russia."[61]

Although the United States never joined, unofficial observers became more and more involved, especially in the 1930s. American philanthropies came heavily involved, especially the Rockefeller Foundation. It made major grants designed to build up the technical expertise of the League staff. Ludovic Tournès argues that by the 1930s the foundations had changed the League from a "Parliament of Nations" to a modern think tank that used specialized expertise to provide in-depth impartial analysis of international issues.[62]

Languages and symbols

The official languages of the League of Nations were French and English.[63]

In 1939, a semi-official emblem for the League of Nations emerged: two five-pointed stars within a blue pentagon. They symbolised the Earth's five continents and "five races". A bow at the top displayed the English name ("League of Nations"), while another at the bottom showed the French ("Société des Nations").[64]

 
An example of a flag used by the League of Nations, as flown at the 1939 New York World's Fair

Principal organs

 
League of Nations Organisation chart[65]
 
The Palace of Nations, Geneva, the League's headquarters from 1936 until its dissolution in 1946

The main constitutional organs of the League were the Assembly, the council, and the Permanent Secretariat. It also had two essential wings: the Permanent Court of International Justice and the International Labour Organization. In addition, there were several auxiliary agencies and commissions.[66] Each organ's budget was allocated by the Assembly (the League was supported financially by its member states).[67]

The relations between the assembly and the council and the competencies of each were for the most part not explicitly defined. Each body could deal with any matter within the sphere of competence of the league or affecting peace in the world. Particular questions or tasks might be referred to either.[68]

Unanimity was required for the decisions of both the assembly and the council, except in matters of procedure and some other specific cases such as the admission of new members. This requirement was a reflection of the league's belief in the sovereignty of its component nations; the league sought a solution by consent, not by dictation. In case of a dispute, the consent of the parties to the dispute was not required for unanimity.[69]

The Permanent Secretariat, established at the seat of the League at Geneva, comprised a body of experts in various spheres under the direction of the general secretary.[70] Its principal sections were Political, Financial and Economics, Transit, Minorities and Administration (administering the Saar and Danzig), Mandates, Disarmament, Health, Social (Opium and Traffic in Women and Children), Intellectual Cooperation and International Bureaux, Legal, and Information. The staff of the Secretariat was responsible for preparing the agenda for the Council and the Assembly and publishing reports of the meetings and other routine matters, effectively acting as the League's civil service. In 1931 the staff numbered 707.[71]

 
A session of the Assembly (1923), meeting in Geneva at the Salle de la Réformation (in a building at the corner of Boulevard Helvétique and Rue du Rhône) from 1920 to 1929, and at the Bâtiment électoral or Palais Électoral (Rue du Général- Dufour 24) from 1930 to 1936 as well as for special sessions at the Palais du désarmement adjacent to the Palais Wilson,[72] before moving into the Assembly Hall of the Palace of Nations.

The Assembly consisted of representatives of all members of the League, with each state allowed up to three representatives and one vote.[73] It met in Geneva and, after its initial sessions in 1920,[74] it convened once a year in September.[73] The special functions of the Assembly included the admission of new members, the periodical election of non-permanent members to the council, the election with the Council of the judges of the Permanent Court, and control of the budget. In practice, the Assembly was the general directing force of League activities.[75]

The League Council acted as a type of executive body directing the Assembly's business.[76] It began with four permanent members – Great Britain, France, Italy, and Japan – and four non-permanent members that were elected by the Assembly for a three-year term.[77] The first non-permanent members were Belgium, Brazil, Greece, and Spain.[78]

The composition of the council was changed several times. The number of non-permanent members was first increased to six on 22 September 1922 and to nine on 8 September 1926. Werner Dankwort of Germany pushed for his country to join the League; joining in 1926, Germany became the fifth permanent member of the council. Later, after Germany and Japan both left the League, the number of non-permanent seats was increased from nine to eleven, and the Soviet Union was made a permanent member giving the council a total of fifteen members.[78] The Council met, on average, five times a year and in extraordinary sessions when required. In total, 107 sessions were held between 1920 and 1939.[79]

Other bodies

The League oversaw the Permanent Court of International Justice and several other agencies and commissions created to deal with pressing international problems. These included the Disarmament Commission, the International Labour Organization (ILO), the Mandates Commission, the International Commission on Intellectual Cooperation[80] (precursor to UNESCO), the Permanent Central Opium Board, the Commission for Refugees, and the Slavery Commission.[81] Three of these institutions were transferred to the United Nations after the Second World War: the International Labour Organization, the Permanent Court of International Justice (as the International Court of Justice), and the Health Organisation[82][83] (restructured as the World Health Organization).[84]

The Permanent Court of International Justice was provided for by the Covenant, but not established by it. The Council and the Assembly established its constitution. Its judges were elected by the Council and the Assembly, and its budget was provided by the latter. The Court was to hear and decide any international dispute which the parties concerned submitted to it. It might also give an advisory opinion on any dispute or question referred to it by the council or the Assembly. The Court was open to all the nations of the world under certain broad conditions.[85]

 
Child labour in a coal mine, United States, c. 1912

The International Labour Organization was created in 1919 on the basis of Part XIII of the Treaty of Versailles.[86] The ILO, although having the same members as the League and being subject to the budget control of the Assembly, was an autonomous organisation with its own Governing Body, its own General Conference and its own Secretariat. Its constitution differed from that of the League: representation had been accorded not only to governments but also to representatives of employers' and workers' organisations. Albert Thomas was its first director.[87]

 
Child labour in Kamerun in 1919

The ILO successfully restricted the addition of lead to paint,[88] and convinced several countries to adopt an eight-hour work day and forty-eight-hour working week. It also campaigned to end child labour, increase the rights of women in the workplace, and make shipowners liable for accidents involving seamen.[86] After the demise of the League, the ILO became an agency of the United Nations in 1946.[89]

The League's Health Organisation had three bodies: the Health Bureau, containing permanent officials of the League; the General Advisory Council or Conference, an executive section consisting of medical experts; and the Health Committee. In practice, the Paris-based Office international d'hygiène publique (OIHP) founded in 1907 after the International Sanitary Conferences, was discharging most of the practical health-related questions, and its relations with the League's Health Committee were often conflictual.[90][83] The Health Committee's purpose was to conduct inquiries, oversee the operation of the League's health work, and prepare work to be presented to the council.[91] This body focused on ending leprosy, malaria, and yellow fever, the latter two by starting an international campaign to exterminate mosquitoes. The Health Organisation also worked successfully with the government of the Soviet Union to prevent typhus epidemics, including organising a large education campaign.[92][93]

Linked with health, but also commercial concerns, was the topic of narcotics control. Introduced by the second International Opium Convention, the Permanent Central Opium Board had to supervise the statistical reports on trade in opium, morphine, cocaine and heroin. The board also established a system of import certificates and export authorisations for the legal international trade in narcotics.[94]

The League of Nations had devoted serious attention to the question of international intellectual co-operation since its creation.[95] The First Assembly in December 1920 recommended that the Council take action aiming at the international organisation of intellectual work, which it did by adopting a report presented by the Fifth Committee of the Second Assembly and inviting a committee on intellectual co-operation to meet in Geneva in August 1922. The French philosopher Henri Bergson became the first chairman of the committee.[96] The work of the committee included: an inquiry into the conditions of intellectual life, assistance to countries where intellectual life was endangered, creation of national committees for intellectual co-operation, co-operation with international intellectual organisations, protection of intellectual property, inter-university co-operation, co-ordination of bibliographical work and international interchange of publications, and international co-operation in archaeological research.[97]

The Slavery Commission sought to eradicate slavery and slave trading across the world, and fought forced prostitution.[98] Its main success was through pressing the governments who administered mandated countries to end slavery in those countries. The League secured a commitment from Ethiopia to end slavery as a condition of membership in 1923, and worked with Liberia to abolish forced labour and intertribal slavery. The United Kingdom had not supported Ethiopian membership of the League on the grounds that "Ethiopia had not reached a state of civilisation and internal security sufficient to warrant her admission."[99][98]

The League also succeeded in reducing the death rate of workers constructing the Tanganyika railway from 55 to 4 per cent. Records were kept to control slavery, prostitution, and the trafficking of women and children.[100] Partly as a result of pressure brought by the League of Nations, Afghanistan abolished slavery in 1923, Iraq in 1924, Nepal in 1926, Transjordan and Persia in 1929, Bahrain in 1937, and Ethiopia in 1942.[101]

 

Led by Fridtjof Nansen, the Commission for Refugees was established on 27 June 1921[102] to look after the interests of refugees, including overseeing their repatriation and, when necessary, resettlement.[103] At the end of the First World War, there were two to three million ex-prisoners of war from various nations dispersed throughout Russia;[103] within two years of the commission's foundation, it had helped 425,000 of them return home.[104] It established camps in Turkey in 1922 to aid the country with an ongoing refugee crisis, helping to prevent the spread of cholera, smallpox and dysentery as well as feeding the refugees in the camps.[105] It also established the Nansen passport as a means of identification for stateless people.[106]

The Committee for the Study of the Legal Status of Women sought to inquire into the status of women all over the world.[107] It was formed in 1937, and later became part of the United Nations as the Commission on the Status of Women.[108]

The Covenant of the League said little about economics. Nonetheless, in 1920 the Council of the League called for a financial conference. The First Assembly at Geneva provided for the appointment of an Economic and Financial Advisory Committee to provide information to the conference. In 1923, a permanent economic and financial organisation came into being.[109]

Members

 
A map of the world in 1920–45, which shows the League of Nations members during its history

Of the League's 42 founding members, 23 (24 counting Free France) remained members until it was dissolved in 1946. In the founding year, six other states joined, only two of which remained members throughout the League's existence. Under the Weimar Republic, Germany was admitted to the League of Nations through a resolution passed on 8 September 1926.[110]

An additional 15 countries joined later. The largest number of member states was 58, between 28 September 1934 (when Ecuador joined) and 23 February 1935 (when Paraguay withdrew).[111]

On 26 May 1937, Egypt became the last state to join the League. The first member to withdraw permanently from the League was Costa Rica on 22 January 1925; having joined on 16 December 1920, this also makes it the member to have most quickly withdrawn. Brazil was the first founding member to withdraw (14 June 1926), and Haiti the last (April 1942). Iraq, which joined in 1932, was the first member that had previously been a League of Nations mandate.[112]

The Soviet Union became a member on 18 September 1934,[113] and was expelled on 14 December 1939[113] for invading Finland. In expelling the Soviet Union, the League broke its own rule: only 7 of 15 members of the Council voted for expulsion (United Kingdom, France, Belgium, Bolivia, Egypt, South Africa, and the Dominican Republic), short of the majority required by the Covenant. Three of these members had been made Council members the day before the vote (South Africa, Bolivia, and Egypt). This was one of the League's final acts before it practically ceased functioning due to the Second World War.[114]

Mandates

At the end of the First World War, the Allied powers were confronted with the question of the disposal of the former German colonies in Africa and the Pacific, and the several Arabic-speaking provinces of the Ottoman Empire. The Peace Conference adopted the principle that these territories should be administered by different governments on behalf of the League – a system of national responsibility subject to international supervision.[115] This plan, defined as the mandate system, was adopted by the "Council of Ten" (the heads of government and foreign ministers of the main Allied powers: Britain, France, the United States, Italy, and Japan) on 30 January 1919 and transmitted to the League of Nations.[116]

League of Nations mandates were established under Article 22 of the Covenant of the League of Nations.[117] The Permanent Mandates Commission supervised League of Nations mandates,[118] and also organised plebiscites in disputed territories so that residents could decide which country they would join. There were three mandate classifications: A, B and C.[119]

The A mandates (applied to parts of the old Ottoman Empire) were "certain communities" that had

...reached a stage of development where their existence as independent nations can be provisionally recognised subject to the rendering of administrative advice and assistance by a Mandatory until such time as they are able to stand alone. The wishes of these communities must be a principal consideration in the selection of the Mandatory.[120]

— Article 22, The Covenant of the League of Nations

The B mandates were applied to the former German colonies that the League took responsibility for after the First World War. These were described as "peoples" that the League said were

...at such a stage that the Mandatory must be responsible for the administration of the territory under conditions which will guarantee freedom of conscience and religion, subject only to the maintenance of public order and morals, the prohibition of abuses such as the slave trade, the arms traffic and the liquor traffic, and the prevention of the establishment of fortifications or military and naval bases and of military training of the natives for other than police purposes and the defence of territory, and will also secure equal opportunities for the trade and commerce of other Members of the League.[120]

— Article 22, The Covenant of the League of Nations

South West Africa and certain South Pacific Islands were administered by League members under C mandates. These were classified as "territories"

...which, owing to the sparseness of their population, or their small size, or their remoteness from the centres of civilisation, or their geographical contiguity to the territory of the Mandatory, and other circumstances, can be best administered under the laws of the Mandatory as integral portions of its territory, subject to the safeguards above mentioned in the interests of the indigenous population."[120]

— Article 22, The Covenant of the League of Nations

Mandatory powers

The territories were governed by mandatory powers, such as the United Kingdom in the case of the Mandate of Palestine, and the Union of South Africa in the case of South-West Africa, until the territories were deemed capable of self-government. Fourteen mandate territories were divided up among seven mandatory powers: the United Kingdom, the Union of South Africa, France, Belgium, New Zealand, Australia and Japan.[121] With the exception of the Kingdom of Iraq, which joined the League on 3 October 1932,[122] these territories did not begin to gain their independence until after the Second World War, in a process that did not end until 1990. Following the demise of the League, most of the remaining mandates became United Nations Trust Territories.[123]

In addition to the mandates, the League itself governed the Territory of the Saar Basin for 15 years, before it was returned to Germany following a plebiscite, and the Free City of Danzig (now Gdańsk, Poland) from 15 November 1920 to 1 September 1939.[124]

Resolving territorial disputes

The aftermath of the First World War left many issues to be settled, including the exact position of national boundaries and which country particular regions would join. Most of these questions were handled by the victorious Allied powers in bodies such as the Allied Supreme Council. The Allies tended to refer only particularly difficult matters to the League. This meant that, during the early interwar period, the League played little part in resolving the turmoil resulting from the war. The questions the League considered in its early years included those designated by the Paris Peace treaties.[125]

As the League developed, its role expanded, and by the middle of the 1920s it had become the centre of international activity. This change can be seen in the relationship between the League and non-members. The United States and the Soviet Union, for example, increasingly worked with the League. During the second half of the 1920s, France, Britain and Germany were all using the League of Nations as the focus of their diplomatic activity, and each of their foreign secretaries attended League meetings at Geneva during this period. They also used the League's machinery to try to improve relations and settle their differences.[126]

Åland Islands

Åland is a collection of around 6,500 islands in the Baltic Sea, midway between Sweden and Finland. The islands are almost exclusively Swedish-speaking, but in 1809, the Åland Islands, along with Finland, were taken by Imperial Russia. In December 1917, during the turmoil of the Russian October Revolution, Finland declared its independence, but most of the Ålanders wished to rejoin Sweden.[127] The Finnish government considered the islands to be a part of their new nation, as the Russians had included Åland in the Grand Duchy of Finland, formed in 1809. By 1920, the dispute had escalated to the point that there was danger of war. The British government referred the problem to the League's Council, but Finland would not let the League intervene, as they considered it an internal matter. The League created a small panel to decide if it should investigate the matter and, with an affirmative response, a neutral commission was created.[127] In June 1921, the League announced its decision: the islands were to remain a part of Finland, but with guaranteed protection of the islanders, including demilitarisation. With Sweden's reluctant agreement, this became the first European international agreement concluded directly through the League.[128]

Upper Silesia

The Allied powers referred the problem of Upper Silesia to the League after they had been unable to resolve the territorial dispute between Poland and Germany.[129] In 1919 Poland voiced a claim to Upper Silesia, which had been part of Prussia. The Treaty of Versailles had recommended a plebiscite in Upper Silesia to determine whether the territory should become part of Germany or Poland. Complaints about the attitude of the German authorities led to rioting and eventually to the first two Silesian Uprisings (1919 and 1920). A plebiscite took place on 20 March 1921, with 59.6 per cent (around 500,000) of the votes cast in favour of joining Germany, but Poland claimed the conditions surrounding it had been unfair. This result led to the Third Silesian Uprising in 1921.[130]

On 12 August 1921, the League was asked to settle the matter; the Council created a commission with representatives from Belgium, Brazil, China and Spain to study the situation.[131] The committee recommended that Upper Silesia be divided between Poland and Germany according to the preferences shown in the plebiscite and that the two sides should decide the details of the interaction between the two areas – for example, whether goods should pass freely over the border due to the economic and industrial interdependence of the two areas.[132] In November 1921, a conference was held in Geneva to negotiate a convention between Germany and Poland. A final settlement was reached, after five meetings, in which most of the area was given to Germany, but with the Polish section containing the majority of the region's mineral resources and much of its industry. When this agreement became public in May 1922, bitter resentment was expressed in Germany, but the treaty was still ratified by both countries. The settlement produced peace in the area until the beginning of the Second World War.[131]

Albania

The frontiers of the Principality of Albania had not been set during the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, as they were left for the League to decide.[133] They had not yet been determined by September 1921, creating an unstable situation. Greek troops conducted military operations in the south of Albania. Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (Yugoslav) forces became engaged, after clashes with Albanian tribesmen, in the northern part of the country. The League sent a commission of representatives from various powers to the region. In November 1921, the League decided that the frontiers of Albania should be the same as they had been in 1913, with three minor changes that favoured Yugoslavia. Yugoslav forces withdrew a few weeks later, albeit under protest.[134]

The borders of Albania again became the cause of international conflict when Italian General Enrico Tellini and four of his assistants were ambushed and killed on 27 August 1923 while marking out the newly decided border between Greece and Albania. Italian leader Benito Mussolini was incensed and demanded that a commission investigate the incident within five days. Whatever the results of the investigation, Mussolini insisted that the Greek government pay Italy Lire 50 million in reparations. The Greeks said they would not pay unless it was proved that the crime was committed by Greeks.[135]

Mussolini sent a warship to shell the Greek island of Corfu, and Italian forces occupied the island on 31 August 1923. This contravened the League's covenant, so Greece appealed to the League to deal with the situation. The Allies agreed (at Mussolini's insistence) that the Conference of Ambassadors should be responsible for resolving the dispute because it was the conference that had appointed General Tellini. The League Council examined the dispute, but then passed on their findings to the Conference of Ambassadors to make the final decision. The conference accepted most of the League's recommendations, forcing Greece to pay fifty million lire to Italy, even though those who committed the crime were never discovered.[136] Italian forces then withdrew from Corfu.[137]

Memel

The port city of Memel (now Klaipėda) and the surrounding area, with a predominantly German population, was under provisional Entente control according to Article 99 of the Treaty of Versailles.[138] The French and Polish governments favoured turning Memel into an international city, while Lithuania wanted to annex the area. By 1923, the fate of the area had still not been decided, prompting Lithuanian forces to invade in January 1923 and seize the port. After the Allies failed to reach an agreement with Lithuania, they referred the matter to the League of Nations. In December 1923, the League Council appointed a Commission of Inquiry. The commission chose to cede Memel to Lithuania and give the area autonomous rights. The Klaipėda Convention was approved by the League Council on 14 March 1924, and then by the Allied powers and Lithuania.[139] In 1939 Germany retook the region following the rise of the Nazis and an ultimatum to Lithuania, demanding the return of the region under threat of war. The League of Nations failed to prevent the secession of the Memel region to Germany.

Hatay

With League oversight, the Sanjak of Alexandretta in the French Mandate of Syria was given autonomy in 1937. Renamed Hatay, its parliament declared independence as the Republic of Hatay in September 1938, after elections the previous month. It was annexed by Turkey with French consent in mid-1939.[140]

Mosul

The League resolved a dispute between the Kingdom of Iraq and the Republic of Turkey over control of the former Ottoman province of Mosul in 1926. According to the British, who had been awarded a League of Nations mandate over Iraq in 1920 and therefore represented Iraq in its foreign affairs, Mosul belonged to Iraq; on the other hand, the new Turkish republic claimed the province as part of its historic heartland. A League of Nations Commission of Inquiry, with Belgian, Hungarian and Swedish members, was sent to the region in 1924; it found that the people of Mosul did not want to be part of either Turkey or Iraq, but if they had to choose, they would pick Iraq.[141] In 1925, the commission recommended that the region stay part of Iraq, under the condition that the British hold the mandate over Iraq for another 25 years, to ensure the autonomous rights of the Kurdish population. The League Council adopted the recommendation and decided on 16 December 1925 to award Mosul to Iraq. Although Turkey had accepted the League of Nations' arbitration in the Treaty of Lausanne (1923), it rejected the decision, questioning the council's authority. The matter was referred to the Permanent Court of International Justice, which ruled that, when the council made a unanimous decision, it must be accepted. Nonetheless, Britain, Iraq and Turkey ratified a separate treaty on 5 June 1926 that mostly followed the decision of the League Council and also assigned Mosul to Iraq. It was agreed that Iraq could still apply for League membership within 25 years and that the mandate would end upon its admission.[142][143]

Vilnius

After the First World War, Poland and Lithuania both regained their independence but soon became immersed in territorial disputes.[144] During the Polish–Soviet War, Lithuania signed the Moscow Peace Treaty with the Soviet Union that laid out Lithuania's frontiers. This agreement gave Lithuanians control of the city of Vilnius (Lithuanian: Vilnius, Polish: Wilno), the old Lithuanian capital, but a city with a majority Polish population.[145] This heightened tension between Lithuania and Poland and led to fears that they would resume the Polish–Lithuanian War, and on 7 October 1920, the League negotiated the Suwałki Agreement establishing a cease-fire and a demarcation line between the two nations.[144] On 9 October 1920, General Lucjan Żeligowski, commanding a Polish military force in contravention of the Suwałki Agreement, took the city and established the Republic of Central Lithuania.[144]

After a request for assistance from Lithuania, the League Council called for Poland's withdrawal from the area. The Polish government indicated they would comply, but instead reinforced the city with more Polish troops.[146] This prompted the League to decide that the future of Vilnius should be determined by its residents in a plebiscite and that the Polish forces should withdraw and be replaced by an international force organised by the League. The plan was met with resistance in Poland, Lithuania, and the Soviet Union, which opposed any international force in Lithuania. In March 1921, the League abandoned plans for the plebiscite.[147] After unsuccessful proposals by Paul Hymans to create a federation between Poland and Lithuania, which was intended as a reincarnation of the former union which both Poland and Lithuania had once shared before losing its independence, Vilnius and the surrounding area was formally annexed by Poland in March 1922. After Lithuania took over the Klaipėda Region, the Allied Conference set the frontier between Lithuania and Poland, leaving Vilnius within Poland, on 14 March 1923.[148] Lithuanian authorities refused to accept the decision, and officially remained in a state of war with Poland until 1927.[149] It was not until the 1938 Polish ultimatum that Lithuania restored diplomatic relations with Poland and thus de facto accepted the borders.[150]

Colombia and Peru

There were several border conflicts between Colombia and Peru in the early part of the 20th century, and in 1922, their governments signed the Salomón-Lozano Treaty in an attempt to resolve them.[151] As part of this treaty, the border town of Leticia and its surrounding area was ceded from Peru to Colombia, giving Colombia access to the Amazon River.[152] On 1 September 1932, business leaders from Peruvian rubber and sugar industries who had lost land, as a result, organised an armed takeover of Leticia.[153] At first, the Peruvian government did not recognise the military takeover, but President of Peru Luis Sánchez Cerro decided to resist a Colombian re-occupation. The Peruvian Army occupied Leticia, leading to an armed conflict between the two nations.[154] After months of diplomatic negotiations, the governments accepted mediation by the League of Nations, and their representatives presented their cases before the council. A provisional peace agreement, signed by both parties in May 1933, provided for the League to assume control of the disputed territory while bilateral negotiations proceeded.[155] In May 1934, a final peace agreement was signed, resulting in the return of Leticia to Colombia, a formal apology from Peru for the 1932 invasion, demilitarisation of the area around Leticia, free navigation on the Amazon and Putumayo Rivers, and a pledge of non-aggression.[156]

Saar

Saar was a province formed from parts of Prussia and the Rhenish Palatinate and placed under League control by the Treaty of Versailles. A plebiscite was to be held after fifteen years of League rule to determine whether the province should belong to Germany or France. When the referendum was held in 1935, 90.3 per cent of voters supported becoming part of Germany, which was quickly approved by the League Council.[157][158]

Other conflicts

In addition to territorial disputes, the League also tried to intervene in other conflicts between and within nations. Among its successes were its fight against the international trade in opium and sexual slavery, and its work to alleviate the plight of refugees, particularly in Turkey in the period up to 1926. One of its innovations in this latter area was the 1922 introduction of the Nansen passport, which was the first internationally recognised identity card for stateless refugees.[159]

Greece and Bulgaria

After an incident involving sentries on the Greek-Bulgarian border in October 1925, fighting began between the two countries.[160] Three days after the initial incident, Greek troops invaded Bulgaria. The Bulgarian government ordered its troops to make only token resistance, and evacuated between ten thousand and fifteen thousand people from the border region, trusting the League to settle the dispute.[161] The League condemned the Greek invasion, and called for both Greek withdrawal and compensation to Bulgaria.[160]

Liberia

Following accusations of forced labour on the large American-owned Firestone rubber plantation and American accusations of slave trading, the Liberian government asked the League to launch an investigation.[162] The resulting commission was jointly appointed by the League, the United States, and Liberia.[163] In 1930, a League report confirmed the presence of slavery and forced labour. The report implicated many government officials in the selling of contract labour and recommended that they be replaced by Europeans or Americans, which generated anger within Liberia and led to the resignation of President Charles D. B. King and his vice-president. The Liberian government outlawed forced labour and slavery and asked for American help in social reforms.[163][164]

Mukden Incident: Japan seizes Manchuria from China 1931-1932

 
Chinese delegate addressing the League of Nations concerning the Manchurian Crisis in 1932

The Mukden Incident, also known as the "Manchurian Incident", was a decisive setback that weakened the League because its major members refused to tackle Japanese aggression. Japan itself withdrew.[165][166]

Under the agreed terms of the Twenty-One Demands with China, the Japanese government had the right to station its troops in the area around the South Manchurian Railway, a major trade route between the two countries, in the Chinese region of Manchuria. In September 1931, a section of the railway was lightly damaged by the Japanese Kwantung Army as a pretext for an invasion of Manchuria.[167][168] The Japanese army claimed that Chinese soldiers had sabotaged the railway and in apparent retaliation (acting contrary to orders from Tokyo[169]) occupied all of Manchuria. They renamed the area Manchukuo, and on 9 March 1932 set up a puppet government, with Pu Yi, the former emperor of China, as its executive head.[170]

The League of Nations sent observers. The Lytton Report appeared a year later (October 1932). It declared Japan to be the aggressor and demanded Manchuria be returned to China. The report passed 42–1 in the Assembly in 1933 (only Japan voting against), but instead of removing its troops from China, Japan withdrew from the League.[171] In the end, as British historian Charles Mowat argued, collective security was dead:

The League and the ideas of collective security and the rule of law were defeated; partly because of indifference and of sympathy with the aggressor, but partly because the League powers were unprepared, preoccupied with other matters, and too slow to perceive the scale of Japanese ambitions.[172]

Chaco War

The League failed to prevent the 1932 war between Bolivia and Paraguay over the arid Gran Chaco region. Although the region was sparsely populated, it contained the Paraguay River, which would have given either landlocked country access to the Atlantic Ocean,[173] and there was also speculation, later proved incorrect, that the Chaco would be a rich source of petroleum.[174] Border skirmishes throughout the late 1920s culminated in an all-out war in 1932 when the Bolivian army attacked the Paraguayans at Fort Carlos Antonio López at Lake Pitiantuta.[175] Paraguay appealed to the League of Nations, but the League did not take action when the Pan-American Conference offered to mediate instead. The war was a disaster for both sides, causing 57,000 casualties for Bolivia, whose population was around three million, and 36,000 dead for Paraguay, whose population was approximately one million.[176] It also brought both countries to the brink of economic disaster. By the time a ceasefire was negotiated on 12 June 1935, Paraguay had seized control of most of the region, as was later recognised by the 1938 truce.[177]

Italian invasion of Abyssinia

 
Emperor Haile Selassie I going into exile in Bath, England via Jerusalem

In October 1935, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini sent 400,000 troops to invade Abyssinia (Ethiopia).[178] Marshal Pietro Badoglio led the campaign from November 1935, ordering bombing, the use of chemical weapons such as mustard gas, and the poisoning of water supplies, against targets which included undefended villages and medical facilities.[178][179] The modern Italian Army defeated the poorly armed Abyssinians and captured Addis Ababa in May 1936, forcing Emperor of Ethiopia Haile Selassie to flee to exile in England.[180]

The League of Nations condemned Italy's aggression and imposed economic sanctions in November 1935, but the sanctions were largely ineffective since they did not ban the sale of oil or close the Suez Canal (controlled by Britain).[181] As Stanley Baldwin, the British Prime Minister, later observed, this was ultimately because no one had the military forces on hand to withstand an Italian attack.[182] In October 1935, the US president, Franklin D. Roosevelt, invoked the recently passed Neutrality Acts and placed an embargo on arms and munitions to both sides, but extended a further "moral embargo" to the belligerent Italians, including other trade items. On 5 October and later on 29 February 1936, the United States endeavoured, with limited success, to limit its exports of oil and other materials to normal peacetime levels.[183] The League sanctions were lifted on 4 July 1936, but by that point, Italy had already gained control of the urban areas of Abyssinia.[184]

The Hoare–Laval Pact of December 1935 was an attempt by the British Foreign Secretary Samuel Hoare and the French Prime Minister Pierre Laval to end the conflict in Abyssinia by proposing to partition the country into an Italian sector and an Abyssinian sector. Mussolini was prepared to agree to the pact, but news of the deal leaked out. Both the British and French public vehemently protested against it, describing it as a sell-out of Abyssinia. Hoare and Laval were forced to resign, and the British and French governments dissociated themselves from the two men.[185] In June 1936, although there was no precedent for a head of state addressing the Assembly of the League of Nations in person, Haile Selassie spoke to the Assembly, appealing for its help in protecting his country.[186]

The Abyssinian crisis showed how the League could be influenced by the self-interest of its members;[187] one of the reasons why the sanctions were not very harsh was that both Britain and France feared the prospect of driving Mussolini and Adolf Hitler into an alliance.[188]

Spanish Civil War

On 17 July 1936, the Spanish Army launched a coup d'état, leading to a prolonged armed conflict between Spanish Republicans (the elected leftist national government) and the Nationalists (conservative, anti-communist rebels who included most officers of the Spanish Army).[189] Julio Álvarez del Vayo, the Spanish Minister of Foreign Affairs, appealed to the League in September 1936 for arms to defend Spain's territorial integrity and political independence. The League members would not intervene in the Spanish Civil War nor prevent foreign intervention in the conflict. Adolf Hitler and Mussolini aided General Francisco Franco's Nationalists, while the Soviet Union helped the Spanish Republic. In February 1937, the League did ban foreign volunteers, but this was in practice a symbolic move.[190] The result was a Nationalist victory in 1939 and confirmation to all observers that the League was ineffective in dealing with a major issue.[191]

Second Sino-Japanese War

Following a long record of instigating localised conflicts throughout the 1930s, Japan began a full-scale invasion of China on 7 July 1937. On 12 September, the Chinese representative, Wellington Koo, appealed to the League for international intervention. Western countries were sympathetic to the Chinese in their struggle, particularly in their stubborn defence of Shanghai, a city with a substantial number of foreigners.[192] The League was unable to provide any practical measures; on 4 October, it turned the case over to the Nine Power Treaty Conference.[193][194]

Soviet invasion of Finland

The Nazi-Soviet Pact of 23 August 1939, contained secret protocols outlining spheres of interest. Finland and the Baltic states, as well as eastern Poland, fell into the Soviet sphere. After invading Poland on 17 September 1939, on 30 November the Soviets invaded Finland. Then "the League of Nations for the first time expelled a member who had violated the Covenant."[195] The League action of 14 December 1939, stung, because the Soviet Union became "the only League member ever to suffer such an indignity".[196][197]

Failure of disarmament

Article 8 of the Covenant gave the League the task of reducing "armaments to the lowest point consistent with national safety and the enforcement by common action of international obligations".[198] Haakon Ikonomou argues that the Disarmament Section was a major failure. It was distrusted by the great powers, and given little autonomy by the Secretariat. Its mediocre staffers generated information that was unreliable and caused unrealistic expectations in the general public.[199]

Successes

The League scored some successes, including the 1925 Conference for the Supervision of the International Trade in Arms and Ammunition and in Implements of War. It started to collect international arms data. Most important was the passage in 1925 of the Geneva protocol banning poison gas in war.[200] It reflected strong worldwide public opinion, although the United States did not ratify it until 1975.[201]

Failures

The League had numerous failures and shortfalls. In 1921 it set up the Temporary Mixed Commission on Armaments to explore possibilities for disarmament. It was made up not of government representatives but of famous individuals. They rarely agreed. Proposals ranged from abolishing chemical warfare and strategic bombing to the limitation of more conventional weapons, such as tanks.

Geneva Protocol of 1924

A draft treaty was assembled in 1923 that made aggressive war illegal and bound the member states to defend victims of aggression by force. Since the onus of responsibility would, in practice, be on the great powers of the League, it was vetoed by Great Britain, who feared that this pledge would strain its own commitment to police its British Empire.[202]

The "Geneva Protocol for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes" was a proposal by British Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald and his French counterpart Édouard Herriot. It set up compulsory arbitration of disputes and created a method to determine the aggressor in international conflicts. All legal disputes between nations would be submitted to the World Court. It called for a disarmament conference in 1925. Any government that refused to comply in a dispute would be named an aggressor. Any victim of aggression was to receive immediate assistance from League members.

British Conservatives condemned the proposal for fear that it would lead to conflict with the United States, which also opposed the proposal. The British Dominions strongly opposed it. The Conservatives came to power in Britain and in March 1925 the proposal was shelved and never reintroduced.[203]

World Disarmament Conference

The Allied powers were also under obligation by the Treaty of Versailles to attempt to disarm, and the armament restrictions imposed on the defeated countries had been described as the first step toward worldwide disarmament.[204] The League Covenant assigned the League the task of creating a disarmament plan for each state, but the Council devolved this responsibility to a special commission set up in 1926 to prepare for the 1932–1934 World Disarmament Conference.[205] Members of the League held different views towards the issue. The French were reluctant to reduce their armaments without a guarantee of military help if they were attacked; Poland and Czechoslovakia felt vulnerable to attack from the west and wanted the League's response to aggression against its members to be strengthened before they disarmed.[206] Without this guarantee, they would not reduce armaments because they felt the risk of attack from Germany was too great. Fear of attack increased as Germany regained its strength after the First World War, especially after Adolf Hitler gained power and became German Chancellor in 1933. In particular, Germany's attempts to overturn the Treaty of Versailles and the reconstruction of the German military made France increasingly unwilling to disarm.[205]

The World Disarmament Conference was convened by the League of Nations in Geneva in 1932, with representatives from 60 states. It was a failure.[207] A one-year moratorium on the expansion of armaments, later extended by a few months, was proposed at the start of the conference.[208] The Disarmament Commission obtained initial agreement from France, Italy, Spain, Japan, and Britain to limit the size of their navies but no final agreement was reached. Ultimately, the Commission failed to halt the military build-up by Germany, Italy, Spain and Japan during the 1930s.[209]

Helpless during Coming of World War II

The League was mostly silent in the face of major events leading to the Second World War, such as Hitler's remilitarisation of the Rhineland, occupation of the Sudetenland and Anschluss of Austria, which had been forbidden by the Treaty of Versailles. In fact, League members themselves re-armed. In 1933, Japan simply withdrew from the League rather than submit to its judgement,[210] as did Germany the same year (using the failure of the World Disarmament Conference to agree to arms parity between France and Germany as a pretext), Italy and Spain in 1937.[211] The final significant act of the League was to expel the Soviet Union in December 1939 after it invaded Finland.[212]

General weaknesses

 
The Gap in the Bridge; the sign reads "This League of Nations Bridge was designed by the President of the U.S.A." Cartoon from Punch magazine, 10 December 1920, satirising the gap left by the US not joining the League

The onset of the Second World War demonstrated that the League had failed in its primary purpose, the prevention of another world war. There were a variety of reasons for this failure, many connected to general weaknesses within the organisation. Additionally, the power of the League was limited by the United States' refusal to join.[213]

Origins and structure

The origins of the League as an organisation created by the Allied powers as part of the peace settlement to end the First World War led to it being viewed as a "League of Victors".[214][215] The League's neutrality tended to manifest itself as indecision. It required a unanimous vote of nine, later fifteen, Council members to enact a resolution; hence, conclusive and effective action was difficult, if not impossible. It was also slow in coming to its decisions, as certain ones required the unanimous consent of the entire Assembly. This problem mainly stemmed from the fact that the primary members of the League of Nations were not willing to accept the possibility of their fate being decided by other countries and (by enforcing unanimous voting) had effectively given themselves veto power.[216][217]

Global representation

Representation at the League was often a problem. Though it was intended to encompass all nations, many never joined, or their period of membership was short. The most conspicuous absentee was the United States. President Woodrow Wilson had been a driving force behind the League's formation and strongly influenced the form it took, but the US Senate voted not to join on 19 November 1919.[218] Ruth Henig has suggested that, had the United States become a member, it would have also provided support to France and Britain, possibly making France feel more secure, and so encouraging France and Britain to co-operate more fully regarding Germany, thus making the rise to power of the Nazi Party less likely.[219] Conversely, Henig acknowledges that if the US had been a member, its reluctance to engage in war with European states or to enact economic sanctions might have hampered the ability of the League to deal with international incidents.[219] The structure of the US federal government might also have made its membership problematic, as its representatives at the League would only be able to answer on behalf of the executive branch, certain League decisions such as to go to war, would always require prior approval of the legislative branch regardless of the outcome of any floor vote even.[220]

In January 1920, when the League was born, Germany was not permitted to join because it was seen as having been the aggressor in the First World War. Soviet Russia was also initially excluded because Communist regimes were not welcomed and membership would have been initially dubious due to the ongoing Russian Civil War in which both sides claimed to be the legitimate government of the country. The League was further weakened when major powers left in the 1930s. Japan began as a permanent member of the Council since the country was an Allied Power in the First World War but withdrew in 1933 after the League voiced opposition to its occupation of Manchuria.[221] Italy also began as a permanent member of the council. However the League staunchly opposed Italy's invasion of Ethiopia in 1934. When the war ended in an Italian conquest, the League refused to recognize Italian sovereignty over Ethiopia, prompting the Italian-Fascist government to withdraw from the organization altogether in 1937. Though neutral during World War I, Spain (then still a kingdom) also began as a permanent member of the council, but withdrew in 1939 after the Spanish Civil War ended in a victory for the Nationalists. Though world opinion was much more divided over the Spanish Civil than the conflicts involving Japan and Italy, the general perception leaned in favor of the Republican cause. The League had accepted Germany, also as a permanent member of the council, in 1926, deeming it to have become a "peace-loving country" under the Weimar Republic. After the Nazis came to power in 1933, Adolf Hitler withdrew Germany almost immediately.[222]

Collective security

Another important weakness grew from the contradiction between the idea of collective security that formed the basis of the League and international relations between individual states.[223] The League's collective security system required nations to act, if necessary, against states they considered friendly, and in a way that might endanger their national interests, to support states for which they had no normal affinity.[223] This weakness was exposed during the Abyssinia Crisis, when Britain and France had to balance maintaining the security they had attempted to create for themselves in Europe "to defend against the enemies of internal order",[224] in which Italy's support played a pivotal role, with their obligations to Abyssinia as a member of the League.[225]

On 23 June 1936, in the wake of the collapse of League efforts to restrain Italy's war against Abyssinia, the British Prime Minister, Stanley Baldwin, told the House of Commons that collective security had

failed ultimately because of the reluctance of nearly all the nations in Europe to proceed to what I might call military sanctions ... The real reason, or the main reason, was that we discovered in the process of weeks that there was no country except the aggressor country which was ready for war ... [I]f collective action is to be a reality and not merely a thing to be talked about, it means not only that every country is to be ready for war; but must be ready to go to war at once. That is a terrible thing, but it is an essential part of collective security.[182]

Ultimately, Britain and France both abandoned the concept of collective security in favour of appeasement in the face of growing German militarism under Hitler.[226] In this context, the League of Nations was also the institution where the first international debate on terrorism took place following the 1934 assassination of King Alexander I of Yugoslavia in Marseille, France. This debate established precedents regarding global surveillence (in the form of routine international sharing of surveillence data), the punishment of terrorists as an international (rather than national) matter, and the right of a nation to conduct military attacks within another nation as a response to international terrorism. Many of these concepts are detectable in the discourse of terrorism among states after 9/11.[227]

American diplomatic historian Samuel Flagg Bemis originally supported the League, but after two decades changed his mind:

The League of Nations has been a disappointing failure.... It has been a failure, not because the United States did not join it; but because the great powers have been unwilling to apply sanctions except where it suited their individual national interests to do so, and because Democracy, on which the original concepts of the League rested for support, has collapsed over half the world.[228]

Pacifism, disarmament and radio

The League of Nations lacked an armed force of its own and depended on the Great Powers to enforce its resolutions, which they were very unwilling to do.[229] Its two most important members, Britain and France, were reluctant to use sanctions and even more reluctant to resort to military action on behalf of the League.[230] Immediately after the First World War, pacifism became a strong force among both the people and governments of the two countries. The British Conservatives were especially tepid to the League and preferred, when in government, to negotiate treaties without the involvement of that organisation.[231] Moreover, the League's advocacy of disarmament for Britain, France, and its other members, while at the same time advocating collective security, meant that the League was depriving itself of the only forceful means by which it could uphold its authority.[232]

David Goodman argues that the 1936 League of Nations Convention on the Use of Broadcasting in the Cause of Peace tried to create the standards for a liberal international public sphere. The Convention encouraged friendly radio broadcasts to other nations. It called for League prohibitions on international broadcasts containing hostile speech and false claims. It tried to draw the line between liberal and illiberal policies in communications, and emphasized the dangers of nationalist chauvinism. With Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia active on the radio, its liberal goals were ignored, while liberals warned that the code represented restraints on free speech.[233]

Demise and legacy

 
World map showing member states of the League of Nations (in green and red) on 18 April 1946, when the League of Nations ceased to exist
 
League of Nations archives, Geneva[234]

As the situation in Europe escalated into war, the Assembly transferred enough power to the Secretary General on 30 September 1938 and 14 December 1939 to allow the League to continue to exist legally and carry on reduced operations.[114] The headquarters of the League, the Palace of Nations, remained unoccupied for nearly six years until the Second World War ended.[235]

At the 1943 Tehran Conference, the Allied powers agreed to create a new body to replace the League: the United Nations. Many League bodies, such as the International Labour Organization, continued to function and eventually became affiliated with the UN.[89] The designers of the structures of the United Nations intended to make it more effective than the League.[236]

The final meeting of the League of Nations took place on 18 April 1946 in Geneva.[237] Delegates from 34 nations attended the assembly.[238] This session concerned itself with liquidating the League: it transferred assets worth approximately $22,000,000 (U.S.) in 1946[239] (including the Palace of Nations and the League's archives) to the UN, returned reserve funds to the nations that had supplied them, and settled the debts of the League.[238] Robert Cecil, addressing the final session, said:

Let us boldly state that aggression wherever it occurs and however it may be defended, is an international crime, that it is the duty of every peace-loving state to resent it and employ whatever force is necessary to crush it, that the machinery of the Charter, no less than the machinery of the Covenant, is sufficient for this purpose if properly used, and that every well-disposed citizen of every state should be ready to undergo any sacrifice in order to maintain peace ... I venture to impress upon my hearers that the great work of peace is resting not only on the narrow interests of our own nations, but even more on those great principles of right and wrong which nations, like individuals, depend.

The League is dead. Long live the United Nations.[238]

The Assembly passed a resolution that "With effect from the day following the close of the present session of the Assembly [i.e., April 19], the League of Nations shall cease to exist except for the sole purpose of the liquidation of its affairs as provided in the present resolution."[240] A Board of Liquidation consisting of nine persons from different countries spent the next 15 months overseeing the transfer of the League's assets and functions to the United Nations or specialised bodies, finally dissolving itself on 31 July 1947.[240] The archive of the League of Nations was transferred to the United Nations Office at Geneva and is now an entry in the UNESCO Memory of the World Register.[241]

In the past few decades, by research using the League Archives at Geneva, historians have reviewed the legacy of the League of Nations as the United Nations has faced similar troubles to those of the interwar period. Current consensus views that, even though the League failed to achieve its ultimate goal of world peace, it did manage to build new roads towards expanding the rule of law across the globe; strengthened the concept of collective security, giving a voice to smaller nations; helped to raise awareness to problems like epidemics, slavery, child labour, colonial tyranny, refugee crises and general working conditions through its numerous commissions and committees; and paved the way for new forms of statehood, as the mandate system put the colonial powers under international observation.[9] Professor David Kennedy portrays the League as a unique moment when international affairs were "institutionalised", as opposed to the pre–First World War methods of law and politics.[10]

The principal Allies in the Second World War (the UK, the USSR, France, the U.S., and the Republic of China) became permanent members of the United Nations Security Council in 1946; in 1971, the People's Republic of China replaced the Republic of China (then only in control of Taiwan) as a permanent member of the UN Security Council, and in 1991 the Russian Federation assumed the seat of the dissolved USSR. Decisions of the Security Council are binding on all members of the UN, and unanimous decisions are not required, unlike in the League Council. Only the five permanent members of the Security Council can wield a veto to protect their vital interests.[242]

League of Nations archives

The League of Nations archives is a collection of the League's records and documents. It consists of approximately 15 million pages of content dating from the inception of the League of Nations in 1919 extending through its dissolution in 1946. It is located at the United Nations Office at Geneva.[243] In 2017, the UN Library & Archives Geneva launched the Total Digital Access to the League of Nations Archives Project (LONTAD), with the intention of preserving, digitizing, and providing online access to the League of Nations archives. It was completed in 2022.[244]

See also

Citations

  1. ^ Christian, Tomuschat (1995). The United Nations at Age Fifty: A Legal Perspective. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. p. 77. ISBN 978-90-411-0145-7.
  2. ^ "Covenant of the League of Nations". The Avalon Project. from the original on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 30 August 2011.
  3. ^ See Article 23, "Covenant of the League of Nations". from the original on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 20 April 2009., "Treaty of Versailles". Archived from the original on 19 January 2010. Retrieved 23 January 2010. and Minority Treaties.
  4. ^ Jahanpour, Farhang. "The Elusiveness of Trust: the experience of Security Council and Iran" (PDF). Transnational Foundation of Peace and Future Research. p. 2. (PDF) from the original on 27 July 2014. Retrieved 27 June 2008.
  5. ^ Osakwe, C O (1972). The participation of the Soviet Union in universal international organizations.: A political and legal analysis of Soviet strategies and aspirations inside ILO, UNESCO and WHO. Springer. p. 5. ISBN 978-90-286-0002-7.
  6. ^ Pericles, Lewis (2000). Modernism, Nationalism, and the Novel. Cambridge University Press. p. 52. ISBN 978-1-139-42658-9.
  7. ^ Ginneken, Anique H. M. van (2006). Historical Dictionary of the League of Nations. Scarecrow Press. p. 174. ISBN 978-0-8108-6513-6.
  8. ^ Ellis, Charles Howard (2003). The Origin, Structure & Working of the League of Nations. Lawbook Exchange Ltd. p. 169. ISBN 978-1-58477-320-7.
  9. ^ a b Pedersen, Susan (October 2007). "Back to the League of Nations". The American Historical Review. American Historical Review. 112 (4): 1091–1117. doi:10.1086/ahr.112.4.1091. JSTOR 40008445.
  10. ^ a b Kennedy 1987.
  11. ^ Kant, Immanuel. . Mount Holyoke College. Archived from the original on 14 May 2008. Retrieved 16 May 2008.
  12. ^ Skirbekk & Gilje 2001, p. 288.
  13. ^ Kant, Immanuel (1795). "Perpetual Peace". Constitution Society. from the original on 7 October 2011. Retrieved 30 August 2011.
  14. ^ Reichard 2006, p. 9.
  15. ^ Rapoport 1995, pp. 498–500.
  16. ^ Bouchet-Saulnier, Brav & Olivier 2007, pp. 14–134.
  17. ^ Northedge, F. S. (1986). The League of Nations: Its life and times, 1920–1946. Leicester University Press. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-7185-1194-4.
  18. ^ Morris, Charles (1910). The Marvelous Career of Theodore Roosevelt: Including what He Has Done and Stands For; His Early Life and Public Services; the Story of His African Trip; His Memorable Journey Through Europe; and His Enthusiastic Welcome Home. John C. Winston Company. p. 370.
  19. ^ . The United Nations Office at Geneva. Archived from the original on 9 December 2008. Retrieved 14 June 2008.
  20. ^ a b c Northedge, F. S. (1986). The League of Nations: Its life and times, 1920–1946. Leicester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7185-1194-4.
  21. ^ Sir Alfred Eckhard Zimmern (1969). The League of Nations and the Rule of Law, 1918–1935. Russell & Russell. pp. 13–22.
  22. ^ "A Woman's Peace Party Full Fledged for Action". The Survey. XXXIII (17): 433–434. 23 January 1915. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
  23. ^ Everard & de Haan 2016, pp. 64–65.
  24. ^ van der Veen, Sietske (22 June 2017). . Huygens ING (in Dutch). Huygens Institute for the History of the Netherlands. Archived from the original on 30 August 2017. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  25. ^ Jacobs 1996, p. 94.
  26. ^ Caravantes 2004, pp. 101–103.
  27. ^ Wiltsher 1985, pp. 110–125.
  28. ^ a b "Victory / Democracy / Peace / Make them secure by a League of Nations". The New York Times. 25 December 1918. p. 11.
  29. ^ Dubin, Martin David (1970). "Toward the Concept of Collective Security: The Bryce Group's "Proposals for the Avoidance of War," 1914–1917". International Organization. 24 (2): 288–318. doi:10.1017/S0020818300025911. JSTOR 2705943. S2CID 144909907.
  30. ^ Leonard Woolf (2010). International Government. BiblioBazaar. ISBN 978-1-177-95293-4.
  31. ^ Yearwood, Peter (1989). "'On the Safe and Right Lines': The Lloyd George Government and the Origins of the League of Nations, 1916–1918". The Historical Journal. 32: 131–155. doi:10.1017/s0018246x00015338. S2CID 159466156.
  32. ^ Bell 2007, p. 16.
  33. ^ Archer 2001, p. 14.
  34. ^ Bell 2007, p. 8.
  35. ^ a b c d "The League of Nations – Karl J. Schmidt". American History. from the original on 19 December 2013. Retrieved 10 December 2013.
  36. ^ "Text of the President's Two Speeches in Paris, Stating His Views of the Bases of a Lasting Peace". The New York Times. 15 December 1918. p. 1.
  37. ^ "The League of Nations: a retreat from international law?" (PDF). Journal of Global History. (PDF) from the original on 14 December 2013. Retrieved 10 December 2013.
  38. ^ Thompson, J. A. (1977). "Lord Cecil and the Pacifists in the League of Nations Union". The Historical Journal. 20 (4): 949–959. doi:10.1017/s0018246x00011481. S2CID 154899222.
  39. ^ Heyns, Christof (1995). "The Preamble of the United Nations Charter: The Contribution of Jan Smuts". African Journal of International and Comparative Law. 7: 329+.
  40. ^ Clavin, Patricia (2020). "Britain and the Making of Global Order after 1919". Twentieth Century British History. 31 (3): 340–359. doi:10.1093/tcbh/hwaa007.
  41. ^ Morefield, Jeanne (2020). "'Families of mankind': British liberty, League internationalism, and the traffic in women and children". History of European Ideas. 46 (5): 681–696. doi:10.1080/01916599.2020.1746085. S2CID 216501883.
  42. ^ Wright, Susannah (2020). "Creating liberal-internationalist world citizens: League of Nations Union junior branches in English secondary schools, 1919–1939". Paedagogica Historica. 56 (3): 321–340. doi:10.1080/00309230.2018.1538252. S2CID 149886714.
  43. ^ Getachew, Adom (2019). Worldmaking after Empire: The Rise and Fall of Self-Determination. Princeton University Press. pp. 37–52. doi:10.2307/j.ctv3znwvg. ISBN 978-0-691-17915-5. JSTOR j.ctv3znwvg. S2CID 242525007.
  44. ^ David Hunter Miller (1969). The drafting of the Covenant. Johnson Reprint Corp.
  45. ^ Magliveras 1999, p. 8.
  46. ^ Magliveras 1999, pp. 8–12.
  47. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 35–36.
  48. ^ a b "Inter-Allied Women's Conference in Paris". The Sydney Morning Herald. 23 May 1919. p. 5. from the original on 1 September 2017. Retrieved 31 August 2017 – via Newspapers.com.  
  49. ^ "Women and the Peace Conference". The Manchester Guardian. 18 February 1919. p. 5. from the original on 1 September 2017. Retrieved 31 August 2017 – via Newspapers.com.  
  50. ^ Drexel, Constance (15 March 1919). "Women Gain Victory at Paris Conference". Los Angeles Times. p. 2. from the original on 1 September 2017. Retrieved 31 August 2017 – via Newspapers.com.  
  51. ^ a b Wiltsher 1985, pp. 200–202.
  52. ^ Meyer & Prügl 1999, p. 20.
  53. ^ Pietilä 1999, p. 2.
  54. ^ Wiltsher 1985, p. 212.
  55. ^ Levinovitz & Ringertz 2001, p. 170.
  56. ^ Hewes, James E. (1970). "Henry Cabot Lodge and the League of Nations". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 114 (4): 245–255. JSTOR 985951.
  57. ^ Scott 1973, p. 51.
  58. ^ Scott 1973, p. 67.
  59. ^ League of Nations Chronology 4 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine, The United Nations Office at Geneva
  60. ^ Carole Fink, "The great powers in the new international system, 1919–1923," in Paul Kennedy and William I. Hitchcock, eds, From War to Peace (Yale University Press, 2000) pp 17 – 35 at page 24
  61. ^ Fink, p. 24
  62. ^ Tournès, Ludovic (2018). "American membership of the League of Nations: US philanthropy and the transformation of an intergovernmental organisation into a think tank". International Politics. 55 (6): 852–869. doi:10.1057/s41311-017-0110-4. S2CID 149155486.
  63. ^ League of Nations 1935, p. 22.
  64. ^ . United Nations. Archived from the original on 23 September 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  65. ^ Grandjean, Martin (2017). "Complex structures and international organizations" [Analisi e visualizzazioni delle reti in storia. L'esempio della cooperazione intellettuale della Società delle Nazioni]. Memoria e Ricerca (2): 371–393. doi:10.14647/87204. from the original on 7 November 2017. Retrieved 31 October 2017. See also: French version 7 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine (PDF) and English summary 2 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine.
  66. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 48, 66.
  67. ^ "Budget of the League". University of Indiana. from the original on 23 August 2011. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
  68. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 48–49.
  69. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 53.
  70. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 50.
  71. ^ "League of Nations Secretariat, 1919–1946". United Nations Office at Geneva. from the original on 12 December 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  72. ^ "Main Organs of the League of Nations". UN GENEVA. 16 December 1920. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  73. ^ a b . The United Nations Office at Geneva. Archived from the original on 9 December 2008. Retrieved 18 May 2008.
  74. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 72.
  75. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 48–50.
  76. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 48.
  77. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 42–48.
  78. ^ a b "League of Nations Photo Archive". University of Indiana. from the original on 9 September 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  79. ^ "Chronology 1939". University of Indiana. from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  80. ^ Grandjean, Martin (2016). Archives Distant Reading: Mapping the Activity of the League of Nations' Intellectual Cooperation 15 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine. In Digital Humanities 2016, pp. 531–534.
  81. ^ "League of Nations". National Library of Australia. from the original on 12 October 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  82. ^ "Health Organisation Correspondence 1926–1938". National Library of Medicine.
  83. ^ a b "The International Health Organization Of The League Of Nations". The British Medical Journal. 1 (3302): 672–675. 1924. ISSN 0007-1447. JSTOR 20436330.
  84. ^ . United Nations Office at Geneva. Archived from the original on 23 September 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  85. ^ "Permanent Court of International Justice". University of Indiana. from the original on 27 August 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  86. ^ a b Northedge 1986, pp. 179–80.
  87. ^ Scott 1973, p. 53.
  88. ^ Frowein & Rüdiger 2000, p. 167.
  89. ^ a b . International Labour Organization. Archived from the original on 27 April 2008. Retrieved 25 April 2008.
  90. ^ Howard-Jones, Norman (1979). International public health between the two world wars : the organizational problems. World Health Organization. hdl:10665/39249. ISBN 978-92-4-156058-0.
  91. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 182.
  92. ^ Baumslag 2005, p. 8.
  93. ^ Tworek, Heidi J. S. (2019). "Communicable Disease: Information, Health, and Globalization in the Interwar Period". The American Historical Review. 124 (3): 813–842. doi:10.1093/ahr/rhz577.
  94. ^ McAllister 1999, pp. 76–77.
  95. ^ Grandjean 2018.
  96. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 186–187.
  97. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 187–189.
  98. ^ a b Northedge 1986, pp. 185–86.
  99. ^ British Cabinet Paper 161(35) on the "Italo-Ethiopian Dispute" and exhibiting a "Report of the Inter-Departmental Committee on British interests in Ethiopia" dated 18 June 1935 and submitted to Cabinet by Sir John Maffey
  100. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 166.
  101. ^ The Encyclopedia Americana, Volume 25. Americana Corporation. 1976. p. 24.
  102. ^ "Nansen International Office for Refugees". Nobel Media. from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 30 August 2011.
  103. ^ a b Northedge 1986, p. 77.
  104. ^ Scott 1973, p. 59.
  105. ^ Walsh, Ben; Scott-Baumann, Michael (2013). Cambridge Igcse Modern World History. Hodder Education Group. p. 35. ISBN 978-1-4441-6442-8.
  106. ^ Torpey 2000, p. 129.
  107. ^ Ludi, Regula (2019). "Setting New Standards: International Feminism and the League of Nations' Inquiry into the Status of Women" (PDF). Journal of Women's History. 31: 12–36. doi:10.1353/jowh.2019.0001. S2CID 150543084. (PDF) from the original on 24 November 2020.
  108. ^ de Haan, Francisca (25 February 2010). "A Brief Survey of Women's Rights". UN Chronicle. United Nations. from the original on 16 October 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  109. ^ Hill, M. (1946). The Economic and Financial Organization of the League of Nations. ISBN 978-0-598-68778-4.
  110. ^ "Chronology of the League of Nations" (PDF). United Nations Office at Geneva. (PDF) from the original on 25 May 2017. Retrieved 9 October 2018.
  111. ^ "National Membership of the League of Nations". University of Indiana. from the original on 9 September 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  112. ^ Tripp 2002, p. 75.
  113. ^ a b Scott 1973, pp. 312, 398.
  114. ^ a b Magliveras 1999, p. 31.
  115. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 192–193.
  116. ^ Myers, Denys P (July 1921). "The Mandate System of the League of Nations". Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 96: 74–77. doi:10.1177/000271622109600116. S2CID 144465753.
  117. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 193.
  118. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 198.
  119. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 195.
  120. ^ a b c League of Nations (1924). "The Covenant of the League of Nations:Article 22". The Avalon Project at Yale Law School. from the original on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 20 April 2009.
  121. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 194–195.
  122. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 216.
  123. ^ "The United Nations and Decolonization". United Nations. from the original on 3 September 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  124. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 73–75.
  125. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 70–72.
  126. ^ Henig 1973, p. 170..
  127. ^ a b Scott 1973, p. 60.
  128. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 77–78.
  129. ^ Campbell, F. Gregory (1970). (PDF). The Journal of Modern History. 42 (3): 361–385. doi:10.1086/243995. JSTOR 1905870. S2CID 144651093. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016.
  130. ^ Osmanczyk & Mango 2002, p. 2568.
  131. ^ a b Northedge 1986, p. 88.
  132. ^ Scott 1973, pp. 83.
  133. ^ Kalaja, Deona Çali (2016). "The admission of Albania in the League of Nations". Journal of Liberty and International Affairs. 1 (3): 55–68.
  134. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 103–105.
  135. ^ Scott 1973, p. 86.
  136. ^ Scott 1973, p. 87.
  137. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 110.
  138. ^ Matilda Spence, "Settlement of the Memel Controversy." Current History 20.2 (1924): 233-238 online.
  139. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 107.
  140. ^ Çaǧaptay, Soner (2006). Islam, secularism, and nationalism in modern Turkey. Taylor & Francis. pp. 117–121. ISBN 978-0-415-38458-2.
  141. ^ Scott 1973, p. 133.
  142. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 107–108.
  143. ^ Scott 1973, pp. 131–135.
  144. ^ a b c Northedge 1986, p. 78.
  145. ^ Scott 1973, p. 61.
  146. ^ Scott 1973, p. 62.
  147. ^ Scott 1973, p. 63.
  148. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 78–79.
  149. ^ Bell 2007, p. 29.
  150. ^ Crampton 1996, p. 93.
  151. ^ Osmanczyk & Mango 2002, p. 1314.
  152. ^ Scott 1973, p. 249.
  153. ^ Bethell 1991, pp. 414–415.
  154. ^ Scott 1973, p. 250.
  155. ^ Scott 1973, p. 251.
  156. ^ Hudson, Manley, ed. (1934). The verdict of the League. World Peace Foundation. pp. 1–13.
  157. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 72–73.
  158. ^ Pollock, James K. (1935). "International Affairs: The Saar Plebiscite". The American Political Science Review. 29 (2): 275–282. doi:10.2307/1947508. JSTOR 1947508. S2CID 143303667.
  159. ^ "The United Nations in the Heart of Europe". United Nations. from the original on 10 November 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  160. ^ a b Northedge 1986, p. 112.
  161. ^ Scott 1973, pp. 126–127.
  162. ^ Miers 2003, pp. 140–141.
  163. ^ a b Miers 2003, p. 188.
  164. ^ Du Bois, W.E. Burghardt (July 1933). "Liberia, the League and the United States". Foreign Affairs. 11 (4): 682–95. doi:10.2307/20030546. JSTOR 20030546.
  165. ^ Sara Rector Smith, The Manchurian crisis, 1931–1932: a tragedy in international relations (1970).
  166. ^ Burkman, Thomas W. (2008). Japan and the League of Nations: Empire and World Order, 1914–1938. University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-2982-7. JSTOR j.ctt6wqrcq.
  167. ^ Iriye 1987, p. 8.
  168. ^ Nish 1977, pp. 176–178.
  169. ^ Scott 1973, p. 208.
  170. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 139.
  171. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 156–161.
  172. ^ Charles Loch Mowat, Britain between the Wars 1918–1940 (1955) p. 420.
  173. ^ Scott 1973, pp. 242–243.
  174. ^ Levy 2001, pp. 21–22.
  175. ^ Bethell 1991, p. 495.
  176. ^ Scott 1973, p. 248.
  177. ^ Scheina 2003, p. 103.
  178. ^ a b Northedge 1986, pp. 222–225.
  179. ^ Hill & Garvey 1995, p. 629.
  180. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 221.
  181. ^ Baer 1976, p. 245.
  182. ^ a b Events Leading Up to World War II. Library of Congress. 1944. p. 97.
  183. ^ Baer 1976, p. 71.
  184. ^ Baer 1976, p. 298.
  185. ^ Baer 1976, pp. 121–155.
  186. ^ Haile Selassie I. . Black King. Archived from the original on 25 March 2008. Retrieved 6 June 2008.
  187. ^ Baer 1976, p. 303.
  188. ^ Baer 1976, p. 77.
  189. ^ Lannon 2002, pp. 25–29.
  190. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 264–265, 269–270.
  191. ^ F.P. Walters, A History of the League of Nations (1952) pp. 721–730, 789–791.
  192. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 270.
  193. ^ van Slyke, Lyman, ed. (1967). The China White Paper. Stanford University Press. p. 10.
  194. ^ "Japanese Attack on China 1937". Mount Holyoke University. from the original on 31 August 2011. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  195. ^ Richard W. Leopold, The Growth of American Foreign Policy. A history (New York: Alfred A. Knopf 1964), pp. 558, 561–562 (quote at 562).
  196. ^ Stephen Kotkin, Stalin. Waiting for Hitler, 1929–1941 (New York: Penguin 2017), p.729 (quote).
  197. ^ Cf., Winston Churchill, The Gathering Storm (Boston: Houghton Mufflin 1948), pp. 392–393, 447, 539.
  198. ^ League of Nations (1924). . The Avalon Project at Yale Law School. Archived from the original on 15 April 2016. Retrieved 17 May 2006.
  199. ^ Ikonomou, Haakon A. (2021). "The Administrative Anatomy of Failure: The League of Nations Disarmament Section, 1919–1925". Contemporary European History. 30 (3): 321–334. doi:10.1017/s0960777320000624. S2CID 234162968.
  200. ^ Webster, Andrew (2005). "Making Disarmament Work: The Implementation of the International Disarmament Provisions in the League of Nations Covenant, 1919–1925". Diplomacy & Statecraft. 16 (3): 551–569. doi:10.1080/09592290500208089. S2CID 154279428.
  201. ^ Bunn, G. (1970). "Gas and germ warfare: International legal history and present status". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 65 (1): 253–260. Bibcode:1970PNAS...65..253B. doi:10.1073/pnas.65.1.253. PMC 286219. PMID 4905669.
  202. ^ Webster, Andrew (2008). ""Absolutely Irresponsible Amateurs": The Temporary Mixed Commission on Armaments, 1921-1924". Australian Journal of Politics & History. 54 (3): 373–388. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8497.2008.00512.x.
  203. ^ Williams, John F. (1924). "The Geneva Protocol of 1924 for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes". Journal of the British Institute of International Affairs. 3 (6): 288–304. doi:10.2307/3014555. JSTOR 3014555.
  204. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 113, 123.
  205. ^ a b Northedge 1986, p. 114.
  206. ^ Henig 1973, p. 173.
  207. ^ Temperley, A.C. (1938). The Whispering Gallery Of Europe.
  208. ^ Goldblat 2002, p. 24.
  209. ^ Eloranta, Jari (2011). "Why did the League of Nations fail?". Cliometrica. 5: 27–52. doi:10.1007/s11698-010-0049-9. S2CID 19944887.
  210. ^ Harries, Meirion and Susie (1991). Soldiers of the Sun: The Rise and Fall of the Imperial Japanese Army. p. 163. ISBN 978-0-394-56935-2.
  211. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 47, 133.
  212. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 273.
  213. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 276–278.
  214. ^ Gorodetsky 1994, p. 26.
  215. ^ Raffo 1974, p. 1.
  216. ^ Birn, Donald S (1981). The League of Nations Union. Clarendon Press. pp. 226–227. ISBN 978-0-19-822650-5.
  217. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 279–282, 288–292.
  218. ^ Knock 1995, p. 263.
  219. ^ a b Henig 1973, p. 175.
  220. ^ Henig 1973, p. 176.
  221. ^ McDonough 1997, p. 62.
  222. ^ McDonough 1997, p. 69.
  223. ^ a b Northedge 1986, p. 253.
  224. ^ Northedge 1986, p. 254.
  225. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 253–254.
  226. ^ McDonough 1997, p. 74.
  227. ^ Ditrych, Ondrej (2013). "'International Terrorism' as Conspiracy: Debating Terrorism in the League of Nations". Historical Social Research. 38 (1).
  228. ^ Quoted in Jerald A. Combs, 'American diplomatic history: two centuries of changing interpretations (1983) p 158.
  229. ^ McDonough 1997, pp. 54–5.
  230. ^ Mulder, Nicholas (2022). The Economic Weapon: The Rise of Sanctions as a Tool of Modern War. ISBN 978-0300259360.
  231. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 238–240.
  232. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 134–135.
  233. ^ Goodman, David (2020). "Liberal and Illiberal Internationalism in the Making of the League of Nations Convention on Broadcasting in the Cause of Peace". Journal of World History. 31: 165–193. doi:10.1353/jwh.2020.0006. S2CID 212950904.
  234. ^ League of Nations archives, United Nations Office in Geneva. Network visualization and analysis published in Grandjean, Martin (2014). "La connaissance est un réseau". Les Cahiers du Numérique. 10 (3): 37–54. doi:10.3166/lcn.10.3.37-54. from the original on 27 June 2015. Retrieved 15 October 2014.
  235. ^ Scott 1973, p. 399.
  236. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 278–280.
  237. ^ League of Nations Chronology 30 December 2004 at the Wayback Machine Philip J. Strollo
  238. ^ a b c Scott 1973, p. 404.
  239. ^ "League of Nations Ends, Gives Way to New U.N.", Syracuse Herald-American, 20 April 1946, p. 12
  240. ^ a b Denys P. Myers (1948). "Liquidation of League of Nations Functions". The American Journal of International Law. 42 (2): 320–354. doi:10.2307/2193676. JSTOR 2193676. S2CID 146828849.
  241. ^ . UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. Archived from the original on 30 September 2008. Retrieved 7 September 2009.
  242. ^ Northedge 1986, pp. 278–281.
  243. ^ United Nations Library of Geneva (1978). Guide to the Archives of the League of Nations 1919–1946. United Nations. p. 19. ISBN 978-92-1-200347-4.
  244. ^ . United Nations Geneva. Archived from the original on 8 May 2020. Retrieved 18 December 2019.

General and cited references

Surveys

  • Bendiner, Elmer. A time for angels: the tragicomic history of the League of Nations (1975); well-written popular history.
  • Brierly, J. L. and P. A. Reynolds. "The League of Nations" The New Cambridge Modern History, Vol. XII, The Shifting Balance of World Forces (2nd ed. 1968) Chapter IX, .
  • Cecil, Lord Robert (1922). "League of Nations" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica (12th ed.). London & New York: The Encyclopædia Britannica Company.
  • Gill, George. The League of Nations : from 1929 to 1946 (1996) online
  • Ginneken, Anique H.M. van. Historical Dictionary of the League of Nations (2006) excerpt and text search
  • Henig, Ruth B, ed. (1973). The League of Nations. Oliver and Boyd. ISBN 978-0-05-002592-5.
  • Henig, Ruth. The Peace that Never was: A History of the League of Nations (Haus Publishing, 2019), a standard scholarly history.
  • Housden, Martyn. The League of Nations and the organisation of peace (2012) online
  • Ikonomou, Haakon, Karen Gram-Skjoldager, eds. The League of Nations: Perspectives from the Present (Aarhus University Press, 2019). online review
  • Joyce, James Avery. Broken star : the story of the League of Nations (1919–1939) (1978) online
  • Myers, Denys P. Handbook of the League of Nations : a comprehensive account of its structure, operation and activities (1935) online.
  • Northedge, F.S (1986). The League of Nations: Its Life and Times, 1920–1946. Holmes & Meier. ISBN 978-0-7185-1316-0.
  • Ostrower, Gary B. The League of Nations: From 1919 to 1929 (1996) online, brief survey
  • Pedersen, Susan. The Guardians : the League of Nations and the crisis of empire (2015) online; in-depth scholarly history of the mandate system.
  • Raffo, P (1974). The League of Nations. The Historical Association.
  • Scott, George (1973). The Rise and Fall of the League of Nations. Hutchinson & Co LTD. ISBN 978-0-09-117040-0. online
  • Steiner, Zara. The Lights that Failed: European International History 1919–1933 (Oxford University Press, 2005).
  • Steiner, Zara. The triumph of the dark: European international history 1933-1939 (Oxford University Press, 2011).
  • Temperley, A.C. The Whispering Gallery Of Europe (1938), highly influential account of League esp disarmament conference of 1932–34. online
  • Walters, F. P. (1952). A History of the League of Nations. Oxford University Press. online free; the standard scholarly history

League topics

  • Akami, Tomoko (2017). "Imperial polities, intercolonialism, and the shaping of global governing norms: Public health expert networks in Asia and the League of Nations Health Organization, 1908–37". Journal of Global History. 12: 4–25. doi:10.1017/s1740022816000310. S2CID 159733645.
  • Azcarate, P. de. League of Nations and National Minorities (1945) online
  • Barros, James. Office Without Power: Secretary-General Sir Eric Drummond 1919–1933 (Oxford 1979).
  • Barros, James. The Corfu incident of 1923: Mussolini and the League of Nations (Princeton UP, 2015).
  • Borowy, Iris. Coming to terms with world health: the League of Nations Health Organisation 1921–1946 (Peter Lang, 2009).
  • Burkman, Thomas W. Japan and the League of Nations: Empire and world order, 1914–1938 (U of Hawaii Press, 2008).
  • Caravantes, Peggy (2004). Waging Peace: The story of Jane Addams (1st ed.). Morgan Reynolds. ISBN 978-1-931798-40-2.
  • Chaudron, Gerald. New Zealand in the League of Nations: The Beginnings of an Independent Foreign Policy, 1919–1939 (2014):
  • Clavin, Patricia. Securing the world economy: the reinvention of the League of Nations, 1920–1946 (Oxford UP, 2013).
  • Cooper, John Milton. Breaking the Heart of the World: Woodrow Wilson and the Fight for the League of Nations (2001) 454pp excerpt and text search; a major scholarly study
  • Ditrych, Ondrej (2013). ""International terrorism" in the League of Nations and the contemporary terrorism dispositif". Critical Studies on Terrorism. 6 (2): 225–240. doi:10.1080/17539153.2013.764103. S2CID 144906326.
  • Dykmann, Klaas (2015). "How International was the Secretariat of the League of Nations?". The International History Review. 37 (4): 721–744. doi:10.1080/07075332.2014.966134. S2CID 154908318.
  • Egerton, George W (1978). Great Britain and the Creation of the League of Nations: Strategy, Politics, and International Organization, 1914–1919. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-807-81320-1.
  • Eloranta, Jari (2011). "Why did the League of Nations fail?". Cliometrica. 5: 27–52. doi:10.1007/s11698-010-0049-9. S2CID 19944887.
  • Gill, George (1996). The League of Nations from 1929 to 1946. Avery Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-89529-637-5.
  • Gram-Skjoldager, Karen; Ikonomou, Haakon A. (2019). "Making Sense of the League of Nations Secretariat – Historiographical and Conceptual Reflections on Early International Public Administration". European History Quarterly. 49 (3): 420–444. doi:10.1177/0265691419854634. S2CID 199157356.
  • Grandjean, Martin (2018). Les réseaux de la coopération intellectuelle. La Société des Nations comme actrice des échanges scientifiques et culturels dans l'entre-deux-guerres [The Networks of Intellectual Cooperation. The League of Nations as an Actor of the Scientific and Cultural Exchanges in the Inter-War Period] (phdthesis) (in French). Université de Lausanne.
  • Edward Grey, 1st Viscount Grey of Fallodon (1918), The League of Nations (1st ed.), London: WHSmith, Wikidata Q105700467
  • Götz, Norbert (2005). "On the Origins of 'Parliamentary Diplomacy'". Cooperation and Conflict. 40 (3): 263–279. doi:10.1177/0010836705055066. S2CID 144380900.
  • Housden, Martyn. The League of Nations and the Organization of Peace (Routledge, 2014).
  • Jenne, Erin K. Nested Security: Lessons in Conflict Management from the League of Nations and the European Union (Cornell UP, 2015).
  • Johnson, Gaynor (2013). Lord Robert Cecil: Politician and Internationalist. ISBN 978-0754669449.
  • Kaiga, Sakiko. Britain and the Intellectual Origins of the League of Nations, 1914–1919 (Cambridge University Press, 2021).
  • Kahlert, Torsten (2019). "Pioneers in International Administration: A Prosopography of the Directors of the League of Nations Secretariat". New Global Studies. 13 (2): 190–227. doi:10.1515/ngs-2018-0039. S2CID 201719554.
  • Knock, Thomas J (1995). To End All Wars: Woodrow Wilson and the Quest for a New World Order. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-00150-0.
  • Kuehl, Warren F; Dunn, Lynne K (1997). Keeping the Covenant: American Internationalists and the League of Nations, 1920–1939.
  • La Porte, Pablo. "Dissenting Voices: The Secretariat of the League of Nations and the Drafting of Mandates, 1919–1923." Diplomacy & Statecraft 32.3 (2021): 440-463.
  • League of Nations (1935). Essential Facts about the League of Nations. Geneva.
  • Lloyd, Lorna. "'On the side of justice and peace': Canada on the League of Nations Council 1927–1930." Diplomacy & Statecraft 24#2 (2013): 171–191.
  • Ludi, Regula. "Setting New Standards: International Feminism and the League of Nations' Inquiry into the Status of Women." Journal of Women's History 31.1 (2019): 12-36 online. 24 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • McCarthy, Helen. The British People and the League of Nations: Democracy, citizenship and internationalism, c. 1918–45 (Oxford UP, 2011). online review
  • Macfadyen, David, et al. eds. Eric Drummond and his Legacies: The League of Nations and the Beginnings of Global Governance (2019) excerpt
  • McPherson, Alan, and Yannick Wehrli, eds. Beyond geopolitics: New histories of Latin America at the League of Nations (UNM Press, 2015).
  • Marbeau, Michel (2001). La Société des Nations (in French). Presses Universitaires de France. ISBN 978-2-13-051635-4.
  • Mulder, Nicholas. The Economic Weapon: The Rise of Sanctions as a Tool of Modern War (2022) excerpt also see online review
  • Olivier, Sydney (1918). The League of Nations and primitive peoples  (1 ed.). Oxford University Press.
  • Ostrower, Gary (1995). The League of Nations from 1919 to 1929 (Partners for Peace. Avery Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-89529-636-8.
  • Shine, Cormac (2018). "Papal Diplomacy by Proxy? Catholic Internationalism at the League of Nations' International Committee on Intellectual Cooperation". The Journal of Ecclesiastical History. 69 (4): 785–805. doi:10.1017/S0022046917002731.
  • Swart, William J. "The League of Nations and the Irish Question." Sociological Quarterly 36.3 (1995): 465–481.
  • Thorne, Christopher G. The limits of foreign policy; the West, the League, and the Far Eastern crisis of 1931-1933 (1972) online
  • Tollardo, Elisabetta. Fascist Italy and the League of Nations, 1922-1935 (Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2016).
  • Tournès, Ludovic. "American membership of the League of Nations: US philanthropy and the transformation of an intergovernmental organisation into a think tank." International Politics 55.6 (2018): 852–869.
  • Tworek, Heidi J. S. (2019). "Communicable Disease: Information, Health, and Globalization in the Interwar Period". The American Historical Review. 124 (3): 813–842. doi:10.1093/ahr/rhz577.
  • Wemlinger, Cherri. "Collective Security and the Italo‐Ethiopian Dispute Before the League of Nations." Peace & Change 40.2 (2015): 139–166.
  • Wertheim, Stephen. "The League of Nations: a retreat from international law?" Journal of Global History 7.2 (2012): 210-232. online 14 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • Wertheim, Stephen. "The League That Wasn't: American Designs for a Legalist‐Sanctionist League of Nations and the Intellectual Origins of International Organization, 1914–1920." Diplomatic History 35.5 (2011): 797-836. online 16 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • Winkler, Henry R. Paths Not Taken: British Labour & International Policy in the 1920s (1994) online
  • Yearwood, Peter J. Guarantee of Peace: The League of Nations in British Policy 1914–1925 (Oxford UP, 2009).
    • Yearwood, Peter. "‘On the Safe and Right Lines’: The Lloyd George Government and the Origins of the League of Nations, 1916–1918." Historical Journal 32.1 (1989): 131-155.
    • Yearwood, Peter J. "'Consistently with Honour'; Great Britain, the League of Nations and the Corfu Crisis of 1923." Journal of Contemporary History 21.4 (1986): 559-579.
    • Yearwood, Peter J. "‘Real securities against new wars’: Official British thinking and the origins of the League of Nations, 1914–19." Diplomacy and Statecraft 9.3 (1998): 83-109.
  • Yearwood, Peter. "“A Genuine and Energetic League of Nations Policy”: Lord Curzon and the New Diplomacy, 1918–1925." Diplomacy & Statecraft 21.2 (2010): 159-174.
  • Zimmern, Alfred. The League of Nations and the Rule of Law 1918-1935 (1939) online

Related topics

  • Archer, Clive (2001). International Organizations. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-24690-3.
  • Baer, George W (1976). Test Case: Italy, Ethiopia, and the League of Nations. Hoover Institution Press. ISBN 978-0-8179-6591-4.
  • Barnett, Correlli (1972). The Collapse of British Power. Eyre Methuen. ISBN 978-0-413-27580-6.
  • Baumslag, Naomi (2005). Murderous Medicine: Nazi Doctors, Human Experimentation, and Typhus. Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-98312-3.
  • Bell, P.M.H (2007). The Origins of the Second World War in Europe. Pearson Education Limited. ISBN 978-1-4058-4028-6.
  • Bethell, Leslie (1991). The Cambridge History of Latin America: Volume VIII 1930 to the Present. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-26652-9.
  • Bouchet-Saulnier, Françoise; Brav, Laura; Olivier, Clementine (2007). The Practical Guide to Humanitarian Law. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-5496-2.
  • Churchill, Winston (1986). The Second World War: Volume I The Gathering Storm. Houghton Mifflin Books. ISBN 978-0-395-41055-4.
  • Crampton, Ben (1996). Atlas of Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-16461-0.
  • Everard, Myriam; de Haan, Francisca (2016). Rosa Manus (1881-1942): The International Life and Legacy of a Jewish Dutch Feminist. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-33318-5.
  • Frowein, Jochen A; Rüdiger, Wolfrum (2000). Max Planck Yearbook of United Nations Law. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. ISBN 978-90-411-1403-7.
  • Goldblat, Jozef (2002). Arms control: the new guide to negotiations and agreements. SAGE Publications Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7619-4016-6.
  • Gorodetsky, Gabriel (1994). Soviet Foreign Policy, 1917–1991: A Retrospective. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-7146-4506-3.
  • Haigh, R. H. et al. Soviet Foreign Policy, the League of Nations and Europe, 1917-1939 (1986)
  • Henderson, Arthur (1918). The League of Nations and labour . Oxford University Press.
  • Hill, Robert; Garvey, Marcus; Universal Negro Improvement Association (1995). The Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-07208-4.
  • Iriye, Akira (1987). The Origins of the Second World War in Asia and the Pacific. Longman Group UK Limited. ISBN 978-0-582-49349-0.
  • Jacobs, Aletta Henriette (1996). Feinberg, Harriet (ed.). Memories: My Life as an International Leader in Health, Suffrage, and Peace. Translated by Annie Wright. Feminist Press at City of New York. ISBN 978-1-55861-138-2.
  • Kennedy, David (April 1987). "The Move to Institutions". Cardozo Law Review. 8 (5): 841–988.
  • Lannon, Frances (2002). The Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84176-369-9.
  • Levinovitz, Agneta Wallin; Ringertz, Nils (2001). The Nobel Prize: The First 100 Years. World Scientific. ISBN 978-981-02-4665-5.
  • Levy, Marcela López (2001). Bolivia: Oxfam Country Profiles Series. Oxfam Publishing. ISBN 978-0-85598-455-7.
  • Magliveras, Konstantinos D (1999). Exclusion from Participation in International Organisations: The Law and Practice behind Member States' Expulsion and Suspension of Membership. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. ISBN 978-90-411-1239-2.
  • Marchand, C. Roland (2015). The American Peace Movement and Social Reform, 1889-1918. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-4008-7025-7.
  • McAllister, William B (1999). Drug Diplomacy in the Twentieth Century: An International History. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-17990-4.
  • McDonough, Frank (1997). The Origins of the First and Second World Wars. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-56861-6.
  • Miers, Suzanne (2003). Slavery in the Twentieth Century: The Evolution of a Global Problem. AltaMira Press. ISBN 978-0-7591-0340-5.
  • Meyer, Mary K.; Prügl, Elisabeth, eds. (1999). Gender Politics in Global Governance. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-8476-9161-6.
  • Mulder, Nicholas. The Economic Weapon: The Rise of Sanctions as a Tool of Modern War (2022) excerpt
  • Nish, Ian (1977). Japanese foreign policy 1869–1942:Kasumigaseki to Miyakezaka. Routledge & Kegan Paul. ISBN 978-0-415-27375-6.
  • Osmanczyk, Edmund Jan; Mango, Anthony (2002). Encyclopedia of the United Nations and International Agreements. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-415-93924-9.
  • Pietilä, Hilkka (31 March 1999). (PDF). European Consortium for Political Research Workshop. University of Mannheim. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 May 2017. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
  • Rapoport, Anatol (1995). The Origins of Violence: Approaches to the Study of Conflict. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 978-1-56000-783-8.
  • Reichard, Martin (2006). The EU-NATO relationship: a legal and political perspective. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7546-4759-1.
  • Scheina, Robert L (2003). Latin America's Wars:Volume 2 The Age of the Professional Soldier, 1900–2001. Potomac Books Inc. ISBN 978-1-57488-452-4.
  • Skirbekk, Gunnar; Gilje, Nils (2001). History of Western Thought: From Ancient Greece to the Twentieth Century. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-22073-6.
  • Torpey, John (2000). The Invention of the Passport: Surveillance, Citizenship and the State. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-63493-9.
  • Tripp, Charles (2002). A History of Iraq. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-52900-6.
  • Wiltsher, Anne (1985). Most Dangerous Women: Feminist peace campaigners of the Great War (1st ed.). Pandora Press. ISBN 978-0-86358-010-9.

Historiography

  • Aufricht, Hans "Guide to League of Nations Publications" (1951).
  • Gram-Skjoldager, Karen, and Haakon A. Ikonomou. "Making Sense of the League of Nations Secretariat–Historiographical and Conceptual Reflections on Early International Public Administration." European History Quarterly 49.3 (2019): 420–444.
  • Jackson, Simon. "From Beirut to Berlin (via Geneva): The New International History, Middle East Studies and the League of Nations." Contemporary European History 27.4 (2018): 708–726. online
  • Juntke, Fritz; Sveistrup, Hans: "Das deutsche Schrifttum über den Völkerbund" (1927).
  • Pedersen, Susan "Back to the League of Nations." American Historical Review 112.4 (2007): 1091–1117. JSTOR 40008445.
  • Albert Pollard (1918), The League of Nations in history (1st ed.), London: Oxford University Press, Wikidata Q105626947

External links

  • "The Covenant of the League of Nations", Avalon Project. Documents in Law, History and Diplomacy
  • History of the League of Nations 3 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine, University of Oxford-led project
  • League of Nations Photo archive 3 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  • League of Nations chronology
  • League of Nations timeline, worldatwar.net
  • Wilson's Final Address in Support of the League of Nations Speech made 25 September 1919
  • History (1919–1946) 7 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine from the United Nations Office at Geneva
  • League of Nations Archives from the United Nations Office at Geneva
  • Table of Assemblies 16 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine Dates of each annual assembly, links to list of members of each country's delegation
  • Total Digital Access to the League of Nations Archives Project 20 May 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • LONSEA – League of Nations Search Engine, Cluster of Excellence "Asia and Europe in a Global Context", Universität Heidelberg 7 January 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • , Boston: Old Colony Trust Company, 1919. A collection of charters, speeches, etc. on the topic.

league, nations, confused, with, commonwealth, nations, nations, league, league, legends, this, article, about, intergovernmental, organisation, group, professional, wrestling, professional, wrestling, french, société, nations, sɔsjete, nɑsjɔ, first, worldwide. Not to be confused with Commonwealth of Nations Nations League or League of Legends This article is about the intergovernmental organisation For the group in professional wrestling see League of Nations professional wrestling The League of Nations French Societe des Nations sɔsjete de nɑsjɔ was the first worldwide intergovernmental organisation whose principal mission was to maintain world peace 1 It was founded on 10 January 1920 by the Paris Peace Conference that ended the First World War The main organization ceased operations on 20 April 1946 but many of its components were relocated into the new United Nations League of NationsSociete des Nations1920 1946Anachronous world map showing member states of the League during its 26 year historyStatusIntergovernmental organisationHeadquartersGeneva a Common languagesFrench and EnglishSecretary General 1920 1933Sir Eric Drummond 1933 1940Joseph Avenol 1940 1946Sean LesterDeputy Secretary General 1919 1923Jean Monnet 1923 1933Joseph Avenol 1937 1940Sean LesterHistorical eraInterwar period Treaty of Versailles10 January 1920 First meeting16 January 1920 Dissolved20 April 1946Preceded by Succeeded byConcert of Europe United Nations The headquarters were based from 1 November 1920 in the Palais Wilson in Geneva Switzerland and from 17 February 1936 in the purpose built Palace of Nations also in Geneva The League s primary goals were stated in its Covenant They included preventing wars through collective security and disarmament and settling international disputes through negotiation and arbitration 2 Its other concerns included labour conditions just treatment of native inhabitants human and drug trafficking the arms trade global health prisoners of war and protection of minorities in Europe 3 The Covenant of the League of Nations was signed on 28 June 1919 as Part I of the Treaty of Versailles and it became effective with the rest of the Treaty on 10 January 1920 The first meeting of the Council of the League took place on 16 January 1920 and the first meeting of Assembly of the League took place on 15 November 1920 In 1919 U S president Woodrow Wilson won the Nobel Peace Prize for his role as the leading architect of the League The diplomatic philosophy behind the League represented a fundamental shift from the preceding hundred years The League lacked its own armed force and depended on the victorious Allies of World War I Britain France Italy and Japan were the permanent members of the Executive Council to enforce its resolutions keep to its economic sanctions or provide an army when needed The Great Powers were often reluctant to do so Sanctions could hurt League members so they were reluctant to comply with them During the Second Italo Ethiopian War when the League accused Italian soldiers of targeting International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement medical tents Benito Mussolini responded that the League is very well when sparrows shout but no good at all when eagles fall out 4 At its greatest extent from 28 September 1934 to 23 February 1935 it had 58 members After some notable successes and some early failures in the 1920s the League ultimately proved incapable of preventing aggression by the Axis powers in the 1930s The credibility of the organization was weakened by the fact that the United States never joined and Japan Italy Germany and Spain quit The Soviet Union joined late and was expelled after invading Finland 5 6 7 8 The onset of the Second World War in 1939 showed that the League had failed its primary purpose it was inactive until its abolition The League lasted for 26 years the United Nations UN replaced it in 1946 and inherited several agencies and organisations founded by the League Current scholarly consensus views that even though the League failed to achieve its main goal of world peace it did manage to build new roads towards expanding the rule of law across the globe strengthened the concept of collective security giving a voice to smaller nations helped to raise awareness to problems like epidemics slavery child labour colonial tyranny refugee crises and general working conditions through its numerous commissions and committees and paved the way for new forms of statehood as the mandate system put the colonial powers under international observation 9 Professor David Kennedy portrays the League as a unique moment when international affairs were institutionalised as opposed to the pre First World War methods of law and politics 10 Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Background 1 2 Plans and proposals 1 3 Establishment 1 3 1 Mission 2 Languages and symbols 3 Principal organs 3 1 Other bodies 4 Members 5 Mandates 5 1 Mandatory powers 6 Resolving territorial disputes 6 1 Aland Islands 6 2 Upper Silesia 6 3 Albania 6 4 Memel 6 5 Hatay 6 6 Mosul 6 7 Vilnius 6 8 Colombia and Peru 6 9 Saar 7 Other conflicts 7 1 Greece and Bulgaria 7 2 Liberia 7 3 Mukden Incident Japan seizes Manchuria from China 1931 1932 7 4 Chaco War 7 5 Italian invasion of Abyssinia 7 6 Spanish Civil War 7 7 Second Sino Japanese War 7 8 Soviet invasion of Finland 8 Failure of disarmament 8 1 Successes 8 2 Failures 8 2 1 Geneva Protocol of 1924 8 2 2 World Disarmament Conference 8 2 3 Helpless during Coming of World War II 9 General weaknesses 9 1 Origins and structure 9 2 Global representation 9 3 Collective security 9 4 Pacifism disarmament and radio 10 Demise and legacy 11 League of Nations archives 12 See also 13 Citations 14 General and cited references 14 1 Surveys 14 2 League topics 14 3 Related topics 14 4 Historiography 15 External linksOrigins EditBackground Edit The 1864 Geneva Convention one of the earliest formulations of international law The concept of a peaceful community of nations had been proposed as early as 1795 when Immanuel Kant s Perpetual Peace A Philosophical Sketch 11 outlined the idea of a league of nations to control conflict and promote peace between states 12 Kant argued for the establishment of a peaceful world community not in a sense of a global government but in the hope that each state would declare itself a free state that respects its citizens and welcomes foreign visitors as fellow rational beings thus promoting peaceful society worldwide 13 International co operation to promote collective security originated in the Concert of Europe that developed after the Napoleonic Wars in the 19th century in an attempt to maintain the status quo between European states and so avoid war 14 15 By 1910 international law developed with the first Geneva Conventions establishing laws dealing with humanitarian relief during wartime and the international Hague Conventions of 1899 and 1907 governing rules of war and the peaceful settlement of international disputes 16 17 Theodore Roosevelt at the acceptance for his Nobel Prize in 1910 said it would be a masterstroke if those great powers honestly bent on peace would form a League of Peace 18 One small forerunner of the League of Nations the Inter Parliamentary Union IPU was formed by the peace activists William Randal Cremer and Frederic Passy in 1889 and is currently still in existence as an international body with a focus on the various elected legislative bodies of the world The IPU was founded with an international scope with a third of the members of parliaments in the 24 countries that had parliaments serving as members of the IPU by 1914 Its foundational aims were to encourage governments to solve international disputes by peaceful means Annual conferences were established to help governments refine the process of international arbitration Its structure was designed as a council headed by a president which would later be reflected in the structure of the League 19 Plans and proposals Edit Lord Bryce one of the earliest advocates for a League of Nations Jan Smuts helped to draft the Covenant of the League of Nations At the start of the First World War the first schemes for an international organisation to prevent future wars began to gain considerable public support particularly in Great Britain and the United States Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson a British political scientist coined the term League of Nations in 1914 and drafted a scheme for its organisation Together with Lord Bryce he played a leading role in the founding of the group of internationalist pacifists known as the Bryce Group later the League of Nations Union 20 The group became steadily more influential among the public and as a pressure group within the then governing Liberal Party In Dickinson s 1915 pamphlet After the War he wrote of his League of Peace as being essentially an organisation for arbitration and conciliation He felt that the secret diplomacy of the early twentieth century had brought about war and thus could write that the impossibility of war I believe would be increased in proportion as the issues of foreign policy should be known to and controlled by public opinion The Proposals of the Bryce Group were circulated widely both in England and the US where they had a profound influence on the nascent international movement 21 In January 1915 a peace conference directed by Jane Addams was held in the neutral United States The delegates adopted a platform calling for creation of international bodies with administrative and legislative powers to develop a permanent league of neutral nations to work for peace and disarmament 22 Within months a call was made for an international women s conference to be held in The Hague Coordinated by Mia Boissevain Aletta Jacobs and Rosa Manus the congress which opened on 28 April 1915 23 was attended by 1 136 participants from neutral nations 24 and resulted in the establishment of an organization which would become the Women s International League for Peace and Freedom WILPF 25 At the close of the conference two delegations of women were dispatched to meet European heads of state over the next several months They secured agreement from reluctant foreign ministers who overall felt that such a body would be ineffective but agreed to participate in or not impede creation of a neutral mediating body if other nations agreed and if President Woodrow Wilson would initiate a body In the midst of the War Wilson refused 26 27 The League to Enforce Peace published this full page promotion in The New York Times on Christmas Day 1918 28 It resolved that the League should ensure peace by eliminating causes of dissension by deciding controversies by peaceable means and by uniting the potential force of all the members as a standing menace against any nation that seeks to upset the peace of the world 28 In 1915 a similar body to the Bryce Group was set up in the United States led by former president William Howard Taft It was called the League to Enforce Peace 29 It advocated the use of arbitration in conflict resolution and the imposition of sanctions on aggressive countries None of these early organisations envisioned a continuously functioning body with the exception of the Fabian Society in England they maintained a legalistic approach that would limit the international body to a court of justice The Fabians were the first to argue for a council of states necessarily the Great Powers who would adjudicate world affairs and for the creation of a permanent secretariat to enhance international co operation across a range of activities 30 In the course of the diplomatic efforts surrounding World War I both sides had to clarify their long term war aims By 1916 in Britain fighting on the side of the Allies and in the neutral United States long range thinkers had begun to design a unified international organisation to prevent future wars Historian Peter Yearwood argues that when the new coalition government of David Lloyd George took power in December 1916 there was widespread discussion among intellectuals and diplomats of the desirability of establishing such an organisation When Lloyd George was challenged by Wilson to state his position with an eye on the postwar situation he endorsed such an organisation Wilson himself included in his Fourteen Points in January 1918 a league of nations to ensure peace and justice British foreign secretary Arthur Balfour argued that as a condition of durable peace behind international law and behind all treaty arrangements for preventing or limiting hostilities some form of international sanction should be devised which would give pause to the hardiest aggressor 31 The war had had a profound impact affecting the social political and economic systems of Europe and inflicting psychological and physical damage 32 Several empires collapsed first the Russian Empire in February 1917 followed by the German Empire Austro Hungarian Empire and Ottoman Empire Anti war sentiment rose across the world the First World War was described as the war to end all wars 33 and its possible causes were vigorously investigated The causes identified included arms races alliances militaristic nationalism secret diplomacy and the freedom of sovereign states to enter into war for their own benefit One proposed remedy was the creation of an international organisation whose aim was to prevent future war through disarmament open diplomacy international co operation restrictions on the right to wage war and penalties that made war unattractive 34 In London Balfour commissioned the first official report into the matter in early 1918 under the initiative of Lord Robert Cecil The British committee was finally appointed in February 1918 It was led by Walter Phillimore and became known as the Phillimore Committee but also included Eyre Crowe William Tyrrell and Cecil Hurst 20 The recommendations of the so called Phillimore Commission included the establishment of a Conference of Allied States that would arbitrate disputes and impose sanctions on offending states The proposals were approved by the British government and much of the commission s results were later incorporated into the Covenant of the League of Nations 35 The French also drafted a much more far reaching proposal in June 1918 they advocated annual meetings of a council to settle all disputes as well as an international army to enforce its decisions 35 On his December 1918 trip to Europe Woodrow Wilson gave speeches that reaffirmed that the making of peace and the creation of a League of Nations must be accomplished as one single objective 36 American President Woodrow Wilson instructed Edward M House to draft a US plan which reflected Wilson s own idealistic views first articulated in the Fourteen Points of January 1918 as well as the work of the Phillimore Commission The outcome of House s work and Wilson s own first draft proposed the termination of unethical state behaviour including forms of espionage and dishonesty Methods of compulsion against recalcitrant states would include severe measures such as blockading and closing the frontiers of that power to commerce or intercourse with any part of the world and to use any force that may be necessary 35 The two principal drafters and architects of the covenant of the League of Nations 37 were the British politician Lord Robert Cecil and the South African statesman Jan Smuts Smuts proposals included the creation of a council of the great powers as permanent members and a non permanent selection of the minor states He also proposed the creation of a mandate system for captured colonies of the Central Powers during the war Cecil focused on the administrative side and proposed annual council meetings and quadrennial meetings for the Assembly of all members He also argued for a large and permanent secretariat to carry out the League s administrative duties 35 38 39 According to Patricia Clavin Lord Cecil and the British continued their leadership of the development of a rules based global order into the 1920s and 1930s with a primary focus on the League of Nations The British goal was to systematize and normalize the economic and social relations between states markets and civil society They gave priority to business and banking issues 40 but also considered the needs of ordinary women children and the family as well 41 They moved beyond high level intellectual discussions and set up local organizations to support the League The British were particularly active in setting up junior branches for secondary students 42 The League of Nations was relatively more universal and inclusive in its membership and structure than previous international organisations but the organisation enshrined racial hierarchy by curtailing the right to self determination and prevented decolonization 43 Establishment Edit The first meeting of the Council took place on 16 January 1920 in the Salle de l Horloge at the Quai d Orsay in Paris At the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 Wilson Cecil and Smuts all put forward their draft proposals After lengthy negotiations between the delegates the Hurst Miller draft was finally produced as a basis for the Covenant 44 After more negotiation and compromise the delegates finally approved of the proposal to create the League of Nations French Societe des Nations German Volkerbund on 25 January 1919 45 The final Covenant of the League of Nations was drafted by a special commission and the League was established by Part I of the Treaty of Versailles signed on 28 June 1919 46 47 French women s rights advocates invited international feminists to participate in a parallel conference to the Paris Conference in hopes that they could gain permission to participate in the official conference 48 The Inter Allied Women s Conference asked to be allowed to submit suggestions to the peace negotiations and commissions and were granted the right to sit on commissions dealing specifically with women and children 49 50 Though they asked for enfranchisement and full legal protection under the law equal with men 48 those rights were ignored 51 Women won the right to serve in all capacities including as staff or delegates in the League of Nations organization 52 They also won a declaration that member nations should prevent trafficking of women and children and should equally support humane conditions for children women and men labourers 53 At the Zurich Peace Conference held between 17 and 19 May 1919 the women of the WILPF condemned the terms of the Treaty of Versailles for both its punitive measures as well as its failure to provide for condemnation of violence and exclusion of women from civil and political participation 51 Upon reading the Rules of Procedure for the League of Nations Catherine Marshall a British suffragist discovered that the guidelines were completely undemocratic and they were modified based on her suggestion 54 The League would be made up of a General Assembly representing all member states an Executive Council with membership limited to major powers and a permanent secretariat Member states were expected to respect and preserve as against external aggression the territorial integrity of other members and to disarm to the lowest point consistent with domestic safety All states were required to submit complaints for arbitration or judicial inquiry before going to war 20 The Executive Council would create a Permanent Court of International Justice to make judgements on the disputes In 1924 the headquarters of the League was named Palais Wilson after Woodrow Wilson who was credited as the Founder of the League of Nations Despite Wilson s efforts to establish and promote the League for which he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in October 1919 55 the United States never joined Senate Republicans led by Henry Cabot Lodge wanted a League with the reservation that only Congress could take the U S into war Lodge gained a majority of Senators and Wilson refused to allow a compromise The Senate voted on the ratification on 19 March 1920 and the 49 35 vote fell short of the needed 2 3 majority 56 The League held its first council meeting in Paris on 16 January 1920 six days after the Versailles Treaty and the Covenant of the League of Nations came into force 57 On 1 November 1920 the headquarters of the League was moved from London to Geneva where the first General Assembly was held on 15 November 1920 58 59 The Palais Wilson on Geneva s western lakeshore named after Woodrow Wilson was the League s first permanent home Mission Edit The covenant had ambiguities as Carole Fink points out There was not a good fit between Wilson s revolutionary conception of the League as a solid replacement for a corrupt alliance system a guardian of international order and protector of small states versus Lloyd George s desire for a cheap self enforcing peace such as had been maintained by the old and more fluid Concert of Europe 60 Furthermore the League according to Carole Fink was deliberately excluded from such great power prerogatives as freedom of the seas and naval disarmament the Monroe Doctrine and the internal affairs of the French and British empires and inter Allied debts and German reparations not to mention the Allied intervention and the settlement of borders with Soviet Russia 61 Although the United States never joined unofficial observers became more and more involved especially in the 1930s American philanthropies came heavily involved especially the Rockefeller Foundation It made major grants designed to build up the technical expertise of the League staff Ludovic Tournes argues that by the 1930s the foundations had changed the League from a Parliament of Nations to a modern think tank that used specialized expertise to provide in depth impartial analysis of international issues 62 Languages and symbols EditThe official languages of the League of Nations were French and English 63 In 1939 a semi official emblem for the League of Nations emerged two five pointed stars within a blue pentagon They symbolised the Earth s five continents and five races A bow at the top displayed the English name League of Nations while another at the bottom showed the French Societe des Nations 64 An example of a flag used by the League of Nations as flown at the 1939 New York World s FairPrincipal organs EditFurther information Organisation of the League of Nations Permanent Court of International Justice and Leaders of the League of Nations League of Nations Organisation chart 65 The Palace of Nations Geneva the League s headquarters from 1936 until its dissolution in 1946 The main constitutional organs of the League were the Assembly the council and the Permanent Secretariat It also had two essential wings the Permanent Court of International Justice and the International Labour Organization In addition there were several auxiliary agencies and commissions 66 Each organ s budget was allocated by the Assembly the League was supported financially by its member states 67 The relations between the assembly and the council and the competencies of each were for the most part not explicitly defined Each body could deal with any matter within the sphere of competence of the league or affecting peace in the world Particular questions or tasks might be referred to either 68 Unanimity was required for the decisions of both the assembly and the council except in matters of procedure and some other specific cases such as the admission of new members This requirement was a reflection of the league s belief in the sovereignty of its component nations the league sought a solution by consent not by dictation In case of a dispute the consent of the parties to the dispute was not required for unanimity 69 The Permanent Secretariat established at the seat of the League at Geneva comprised a body of experts in various spheres under the direction of the general secretary 70 Its principal sections were Political Financial and Economics Transit Minorities and Administration administering the Saar and Danzig Mandates Disarmament Health Social Opium and Traffic in Women and Children Intellectual Cooperation and International Bureaux Legal and Information The staff of the Secretariat was responsible for preparing the agenda for the Council and the Assembly and publishing reports of the meetings and other routine matters effectively acting as the League s civil service In 1931 the staff numbered 707 71 A session of the Assembly 1923 meeting in Geneva at the Salle de la Reformation in a building at the corner of Boulevard Helvetique and Rue du Rhone from 1920 to 1929 and at the Batiment electoral or Palais Electoral Rue du General Dufour 24 from 1930 to 1936 as well as for special sessions at the Palais du desarmement adjacent to the Palais Wilson 72 before moving into the Assembly Hall of the Palace of Nations The Assembly consisted of representatives of all members of the League with each state allowed up to three representatives and one vote 73 It met in Geneva and after its initial sessions in 1920 74 it convened once a year in September 73 The special functions of the Assembly included the admission of new members the periodical election of non permanent members to the council the election with the Council of the judges of the Permanent Court and control of the budget In practice the Assembly was the general directing force of League activities 75 The League Council acted as a type of executive body directing the Assembly s business 76 It began with four permanent members Great Britain France Italy and Japan and four non permanent members that were elected by the Assembly for a three year term 77 The first non permanent members were Belgium Brazil Greece and Spain 78 The composition of the council was changed several times The number of non permanent members was first increased to six on 22 September 1922 and to nine on 8 September 1926 Werner Dankwort of Germany pushed for his country to join the League joining in 1926 Germany became the fifth permanent member of the council Later after Germany and Japan both left the League the number of non permanent seats was increased from nine to eleven and the Soviet Union was made a permanent member giving the council a total of fifteen members 78 The Council met on average five times a year and in extraordinary sessions when required In total 107 sessions were held between 1920 and 1939 79 Other bodies Edit The League oversaw the Permanent Court of International Justice and several other agencies and commissions created to deal with pressing international problems These included the Disarmament Commission the International Labour Organization ILO the Mandates Commission the International Commission on Intellectual Cooperation 80 precursor to UNESCO the Permanent Central Opium Board the Commission for Refugees and the Slavery Commission 81 Three of these institutions were transferred to the United Nations after the Second World War the International Labour Organization the Permanent Court of International Justice as the International Court of Justice and the Health Organisation 82 83 restructured as the World Health Organization 84 The Permanent Court of International Justice was provided for by the Covenant but not established by it The Council and the Assembly established its constitution Its judges were elected by the Council and the Assembly and its budget was provided by the latter The Court was to hear and decide any international dispute which the parties concerned submitted to it It might also give an advisory opinion on any dispute or question referred to it by the council or the Assembly The Court was open to all the nations of the world under certain broad conditions 85 Child labour in a coal mine United States c 1912 The International Labour Organization was created in 1919 on the basis of Part XIII of the Treaty of Versailles 86 The ILO although having the same members as the League and being subject to the budget control of the Assembly was an autonomous organisation with its own Governing Body its own General Conference and its own Secretariat Its constitution differed from that of the League representation had been accorded not only to governments but also to representatives of employers and workers organisations Albert Thomas was its first director 87 Child labour in Kamerun in 1919 The ILO successfully restricted the addition of lead to paint 88 and convinced several countries to adopt an eight hour work day and forty eight hour working week It also campaigned to end child labour increase the rights of women in the workplace and make shipowners liable for accidents involving seamen 86 After the demise of the League the ILO became an agency of the United Nations in 1946 89 The League s Health Organisation had three bodies the Health Bureau containing permanent officials of the League the General Advisory Council or Conference an executive section consisting of medical experts and the Health Committee In practice the Paris based Office international d hygiene publique OIHP founded in 1907 after the International Sanitary Conferences was discharging most of the practical health related questions and its relations with the League s Health Committee were often conflictual 90 83 The Health Committee s purpose was to conduct inquiries oversee the operation of the League s health work and prepare work to be presented to the council 91 This body focused on ending leprosy malaria and yellow fever the latter two by starting an international campaign to exterminate mosquitoes The Health Organisation also worked successfully with the government of the Soviet Union to prevent typhus epidemics including organising a large education campaign 92 93 Linked with health but also commercial concerns was the topic of narcotics control Introduced by the second International Opium Convention the Permanent Central Opium Board had to supervise the statistical reports on trade in opium morphine cocaine and heroin The board also established a system of import certificates and export authorisations for the legal international trade in narcotics 94 The League of Nations had devoted serious attention to the question of international intellectual co operation since its creation 95 The First Assembly in December 1920 recommended that the Council take action aiming at the international organisation of intellectual work which it did by adopting a report presented by the Fifth Committee of the Second Assembly and inviting a committee on intellectual co operation to meet in Geneva in August 1922 The French philosopher Henri Bergson became the first chairman of the committee 96 The work of the committee included an inquiry into the conditions of intellectual life assistance to countries where intellectual life was endangered creation of national committees for intellectual co operation co operation with international intellectual organisations protection of intellectual property inter university co operation co ordination of bibliographical work and international interchange of publications and international co operation in archaeological research 97 The Slavery Commission sought to eradicate slavery and slave trading across the world and fought forced prostitution 98 Its main success was through pressing the governments who administered mandated countries to end slavery in those countries The League secured a commitment from Ethiopia to end slavery as a condition of membership in 1923 and worked with Liberia to abolish forced labour and intertribal slavery The United Kingdom had not supported Ethiopian membership of the League on the grounds that Ethiopia had not reached a state of civilisation and internal security sufficient to warrant her admission 99 98 The League also succeeded in reducing the death rate of workers constructing the Tanganyika railway from 55 to 4 per cent Records were kept to control slavery prostitution and the trafficking of women and children 100 Partly as a result of pressure brought by the League of Nations Afghanistan abolished slavery in 1923 Iraq in 1924 Nepal in 1926 Transjordan and Persia in 1929 Bahrain in 1937 and Ethiopia in 1942 101 A sample Nansen passport Led by Fridtjof Nansen the Commission for Refugees was established on 27 June 1921 102 to look after the interests of refugees including overseeing their repatriation and when necessary resettlement 103 At the end of the First World War there were two to three million ex prisoners of war from various nations dispersed throughout Russia 103 within two years of the commission s foundation it had helped 425 000 of them return home 104 It established camps in Turkey in 1922 to aid the country with an ongoing refugee crisis helping to prevent the spread of cholera smallpox and dysentery as well as feeding the refugees in the camps 105 It also established the Nansen passport as a means of identification for stateless people 106 The Committee for the Study of the Legal Status of Women sought to inquire into the status of women all over the world 107 It was formed in 1937 and later became part of the United Nations as the Commission on the Status of Women 108 The Covenant of the League said little about economics Nonetheless in 1920 the Council of the League called for a financial conference The First Assembly at Geneva provided for the appointment of an Economic and Financial Advisory Committee to provide information to the conference In 1923 a permanent economic and financial organisation came into being 109 Members EditSee also Member states of the League of Nations A map of the world in 1920 45 which shows the League of Nations members during its history Of the League s 42 founding members 23 24 counting Free France remained members until it was dissolved in 1946 In the founding year six other states joined only two of which remained members throughout the League s existence Under the Weimar Republic Germany was admitted to the League of Nations through a resolution passed on 8 September 1926 110 An additional 15 countries joined later The largest number of member states was 58 between 28 September 1934 when Ecuador joined and 23 February 1935 when Paraguay withdrew 111 On 26 May 1937 Egypt became the last state to join the League The first member to withdraw permanently from the League was Costa Rica on 22 January 1925 having joined on 16 December 1920 this also makes it the member to have most quickly withdrawn Brazil was the first founding member to withdraw 14 June 1926 and Haiti the last April 1942 Iraq which joined in 1932 was the first member that had previously been a League of Nations mandate 112 The Soviet Union became a member on 18 September 1934 113 and was expelled on 14 December 1939 113 for invading Finland In expelling the Soviet Union the League broke its own rule only 7 of 15 members of the Council voted for expulsion United Kingdom France Belgium Bolivia Egypt South Africa and the Dominican Republic short of the majority required by the Covenant Three of these members had been made Council members the day before the vote South Africa Bolivia and Egypt This was one of the League s final acts before it practically ceased functioning due to the Second World War 114 Mandates EditMain article League of Nations mandate At the end of the First World War the Allied powers were confronted with the question of the disposal of the former German colonies in Africa and the Pacific and the several Arabic speaking provinces of the Ottoman Empire The Peace Conference adopted the principle that these territories should be administered by different governments on behalf of the League a system of national responsibility subject to international supervision 115 This plan defined as the mandate system was adopted by the Council of Ten the heads of government and foreign ministers of the main Allied powers Britain France the United States Italy and Japan on 30 January 1919 and transmitted to the League of Nations 116 League of Nations mandates were established under Article 22 of the Covenant of the League of Nations 117 The Permanent Mandates Commission supervised League of Nations mandates 118 and also organised plebiscites in disputed territories so that residents could decide which country they would join There were three mandate classifications A B and C 119 The A mandates applied to parts of the old Ottoman Empire were certain communities that had reached a stage of development where their existence as independent nations can be provisionally recognised subject to the rendering of administrative advice and assistance by a Mandatory until such time as they are able to stand alone The wishes of these communities must be a principal consideration in the selection of the Mandatory 120 Article 22 The Covenant of the League of NationsThe B mandates were applied to the former German colonies that the League took responsibility for after the First World War These were described as peoples that the League said were at such a stage that the Mandatory must be responsible for the administration of the territory under conditions which will guarantee freedom of conscience and religion subject only to the maintenance of public order and morals the prohibition of abuses such as the slave trade the arms traffic and the liquor traffic and the prevention of the establishment of fortifications or military and naval bases and of military training of the natives for other than police purposes and the defence of territory and will also secure equal opportunities for the trade and commerce of other Members of the League 120 Article 22 The Covenant of the League of NationsSouth West Africa and certain South Pacific Islands were administered by League members under C mandates These were classified as territories which owing to the sparseness of their population or their small size or their remoteness from the centres of civilisation or their geographical contiguity to the territory of the Mandatory and other circumstances can be best administered under the laws of the Mandatory as integral portions of its territory subject to the safeguards above mentioned in the interests of the indigenous population 120 Article 22 The Covenant of the League of Nations Mandatory powers Edit The territories were governed by mandatory powers such as the United Kingdom in the case of the Mandate of Palestine and the Union of South Africa in the case of South West Africa until the territories were deemed capable of self government Fourteen mandate territories were divided up among seven mandatory powers the United Kingdom the Union of South Africa France Belgium New Zealand Australia and Japan 121 With the exception of the Kingdom of Iraq which joined the League on 3 October 1932 122 these territories did not begin to gain their independence until after the Second World War in a process that did not end until 1990 Following the demise of the League most of the remaining mandates became United Nations Trust Territories 123 In addition to the mandates the League itself governed the Territory of the Saar Basin for 15 years before it was returned to Germany following a plebiscite and the Free City of Danzig now Gdansk Poland from 15 November 1920 to 1 September 1939 124 Resolving territorial disputes EditThe aftermath of the First World War left many issues to be settled including the exact position of national boundaries and which country particular regions would join Most of these questions were handled by the victorious Allied powers in bodies such as the Allied Supreme Council The Allies tended to refer only particularly difficult matters to the League This meant that during the early interwar period the League played little part in resolving the turmoil resulting from the war The questions the League considered in its early years included those designated by the Paris Peace treaties 125 As the League developed its role expanded and by the middle of the 1920s it had become the centre of international activity This change can be seen in the relationship between the League and non members The United States and the Soviet Union for example increasingly worked with the League During the second half of the 1920s France Britain and Germany were all using the League of Nations as the focus of their diplomatic activity and each of their foreign secretaries attended League meetings at Geneva during this period They also used the League s machinery to try to improve relations and settle their differences 126 Aland Islands Edit Main article Aland crisis Aland is a collection of around 6 500 islands in the Baltic Sea midway between Sweden and Finland The islands are almost exclusively Swedish speaking but in 1809 the Aland Islands along with Finland were taken by Imperial Russia In December 1917 during the turmoil of the Russian October Revolution Finland declared its independence but most of the Alanders wished to rejoin Sweden 127 The Finnish government considered the islands to be a part of their new nation as the Russians had included Aland in the Grand Duchy of Finland formed in 1809 By 1920 the dispute had escalated to the point that there was danger of war The British government referred the problem to the League s Council but Finland would not let the League intervene as they considered it an internal matter The League created a small panel to decide if it should investigate the matter and with an affirmative response a neutral commission was created 127 In June 1921 the League announced its decision the islands were to remain a part of Finland but with guaranteed protection of the islanders including demilitarisation With Sweden s reluctant agreement this became the first European international agreement concluded directly through the League 128 Upper Silesia Edit Main article Upper Silesia plebiscite The Allied powers referred the problem of Upper Silesia to the League after they had been unable to resolve the territorial dispute between Poland and Germany 129 In 1919 Poland voiced a claim to Upper Silesia which had been part of Prussia The Treaty of Versailles had recommended a plebiscite in Upper Silesia to determine whether the territory should become part of Germany or Poland Complaints about the attitude of the German authorities led to rioting and eventually to the first two Silesian Uprisings 1919 and 1920 A plebiscite took place on 20 March 1921 with 59 6 per cent around 500 000 of the votes cast in favour of joining Germany but Poland claimed the conditions surrounding it had been unfair This result led to the Third Silesian Uprising in 1921 130 On 12 August 1921 the League was asked to settle the matter the Council created a commission with representatives from Belgium Brazil China and Spain to study the situation 131 The committee recommended that Upper Silesia be divided between Poland and Germany according to the preferences shown in the plebiscite and that the two sides should decide the details of the interaction between the two areas for example whether goods should pass freely over the border due to the economic and industrial interdependence of the two areas 132 In November 1921 a conference was held in Geneva to negotiate a convention between Germany and Poland A final settlement was reached after five meetings in which most of the area was given to Germany but with the Polish section containing the majority of the region s mineral resources and much of its industry When this agreement became public in May 1922 bitter resentment was expressed in Germany but the treaty was still ratified by both countries The settlement produced peace in the area until the beginning of the Second World War 131 Albania Edit The frontiers of the Principality of Albania had not been set during the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 as they were left for the League to decide 133 They had not yet been determined by September 1921 creating an unstable situation Greek troops conducted military operations in the south of Albania Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes Yugoslav forces became engaged after clashes with Albanian tribesmen in the northern part of the country The League sent a commission of representatives from various powers to the region In November 1921 the League decided that the frontiers of Albania should be the same as they had been in 1913 with three minor changes that favoured Yugoslavia Yugoslav forces withdrew a few weeks later albeit under protest 134 The borders of Albania again became the cause of international conflict when Italian General Enrico Tellini and four of his assistants were ambushed and killed on 27 August 1923 while marking out the newly decided border between Greece and Albania Italian leader Benito Mussolini was incensed and demanded that a commission investigate the incident within five days Whatever the results of the investigation Mussolini insisted that the Greek government pay Italy Lire 50 million in reparations The Greeks said they would not pay unless it was proved that the crime was committed by Greeks 135 Mussolini sent a warship to shell the Greek island of Corfu and Italian forces occupied the island on 31 August 1923 This contravened the League s covenant so Greece appealed to the League to deal with the situation The Allies agreed at Mussolini s insistence that the Conference of Ambassadors should be responsible for resolving the dispute because it was the conference that had appointed General Tellini The League Council examined the dispute but then passed on their findings to the Conference of Ambassadors to make the final decision The conference accepted most of the League s recommendations forcing Greece to pay fifty million lire to Italy even though those who committed the crime were never discovered 136 Italian forces then withdrew from Corfu 137 Memel Edit Main article Klaipeda Revolt The port city of Memel now Klaipeda and the surrounding area with a predominantly German population was under provisional Entente control according to Article 99 of the Treaty of Versailles 138 The French and Polish governments favoured turning Memel into an international city while Lithuania wanted to annex the area By 1923 the fate of the area had still not been decided prompting Lithuanian forces to invade in January 1923 and seize the port After the Allies failed to reach an agreement with Lithuania they referred the matter to the League of Nations In December 1923 the League Council appointed a Commission of Inquiry The commission chose to cede Memel to Lithuania and give the area autonomous rights The Klaipeda Convention was approved by the League Council on 14 March 1924 and then by the Allied powers and Lithuania 139 In 1939 Germany retook the region following the rise of the Nazis and an ultimatum to Lithuania demanding the return of the region under threat of war The League of Nations failed to prevent the secession of the Memel region to Germany Hatay Edit Main article Hatay State With League oversight the Sanjak of Alexandretta in the French Mandate of Syria was given autonomy in 1937 Renamed Hatay its parliament declared independence as the Republic of Hatay in September 1938 after elections the previous month It was annexed by Turkey with French consent in mid 1939 140 Mosul Edit Main article Mosul Question The League resolved a dispute between the Kingdom of Iraq and the Republic of Turkey over control of the former Ottoman province of Mosul in 1926 According to the British who had been awarded a League of Nations mandate over Iraq in 1920 and therefore represented Iraq in its foreign affairs Mosul belonged to Iraq on the other hand the new Turkish republic claimed the province as part of its historic heartland A League of Nations Commission of Inquiry with Belgian Hungarian and Swedish members was sent to the region in 1924 it found that the people of Mosul did not want to be part of either Turkey or Iraq but if they had to choose they would pick Iraq 141 In 1925 the commission recommended that the region stay part of Iraq under the condition that the British hold the mandate over Iraq for another 25 years to ensure the autonomous rights of the Kurdish population The League Council adopted the recommendation and decided on 16 December 1925 to award Mosul to Iraq Although Turkey had accepted the League of Nations arbitration in the Treaty of Lausanne 1923 it rejected the decision questioning the council s authority The matter was referred to the Permanent Court of International Justice which ruled that when the council made a unanimous decision it must be accepted Nonetheless Britain Iraq and Turkey ratified a separate treaty on 5 June 1926 that mostly followed the decision of the League Council and also assigned Mosul to Iraq It was agreed that Iraq could still apply for League membership within 25 years and that the mandate would end upon its admission 142 143 Vilnius Edit Main article Zeligowski s Mutiny After the First World War Poland and Lithuania both regained their independence but soon became immersed in territorial disputes 144 During the Polish Soviet War Lithuania signed the Moscow Peace Treaty with the Soviet Union that laid out Lithuania s frontiers This agreement gave Lithuanians control of the city of Vilnius Lithuanian Vilnius Polish Wilno the old Lithuanian capital but a city with a majority Polish population 145 This heightened tension between Lithuania and Poland and led to fears that they would resume the Polish Lithuanian War and on 7 October 1920 the League negotiated the Suwalki Agreement establishing a cease fire and a demarcation line between the two nations 144 On 9 October 1920 General Lucjan Zeligowski commanding a Polish military force in contravention of the Suwalki Agreement took the city and established the Republic of Central Lithuania 144 After a request for assistance from Lithuania the League Council called for Poland s withdrawal from the area The Polish government indicated they would comply but instead reinforced the city with more Polish troops 146 This prompted the League to decide that the future of Vilnius should be determined by its residents in a plebiscite and that the Polish forces should withdraw and be replaced by an international force organised by the League The plan was met with resistance in Poland Lithuania and the Soviet Union which opposed any international force in Lithuania In March 1921 the League abandoned plans for the plebiscite 147 After unsuccessful proposals by Paul Hymans to create a federation between Poland and Lithuania which was intended as a reincarnation of the former union which both Poland and Lithuania had once shared before losing its independence Vilnius and the surrounding area was formally annexed by Poland in March 1922 After Lithuania took over the Klaipeda Region the Allied Conference set the frontier between Lithuania and Poland leaving Vilnius within Poland on 14 March 1923 148 Lithuanian authorities refused to accept the decision and officially remained in a state of war with Poland until 1927 149 It was not until the 1938 Polish ultimatum that Lithuania restored diplomatic relations with Poland and thus de facto accepted the borders 150 Colombia and Peru Edit Main article Colombia Peru War There were several border conflicts between Colombia and Peru in the early part of the 20th century and in 1922 their governments signed the Salomon Lozano Treaty in an attempt to resolve them 151 As part of this treaty the border town of Leticia and its surrounding area was ceded from Peru to Colombia giving Colombia access to the Amazon River 152 On 1 September 1932 business leaders from Peruvian rubber and sugar industries who had lost land as a result organised an armed takeover of Leticia 153 At first the Peruvian government did not recognise the military takeover but President of Peru Luis Sanchez Cerro decided to resist a Colombian re occupation The Peruvian Army occupied Leticia leading to an armed conflict between the two nations 154 After months of diplomatic negotiations the governments accepted mediation by the League of Nations and their representatives presented their cases before the council A provisional peace agreement signed by both parties in May 1933 provided for the League to assume control of the disputed territory while bilateral negotiations proceeded 155 In May 1934 a final peace agreement was signed resulting in the return of Leticia to Colombia a formal apology from Peru for the 1932 invasion demilitarisation of the area around Leticia free navigation on the Amazon and Putumayo Rivers and a pledge of non aggression 156 Saar Edit Main article 1935 Saar status referendum Saar was a province formed from parts of Prussia and the Rhenish Palatinate and placed under League control by the Treaty of Versailles A plebiscite was to be held after fifteen years of League rule to determine whether the province should belong to Germany or France When the referendum was held in 1935 90 3 per cent of voters supported becoming part of Germany which was quickly approved by the League Council 157 158 Other conflicts EditIn addition to territorial disputes the League also tried to intervene in other conflicts between and within nations Among its successes were its fight against the international trade in opium and sexual slavery and its work to alleviate the plight of refugees particularly in Turkey in the period up to 1926 One of its innovations in this latter area was the 1922 introduction of the Nansen passport which was the first internationally recognised identity card for stateless refugees 159 Greece and Bulgaria Edit Main article Incident at Petrich After an incident involving sentries on the Greek Bulgarian border in October 1925 fighting began between the two countries 160 Three days after the initial incident Greek troops invaded Bulgaria The Bulgarian government ordered its troops to make only token resistance and evacuated between ten thousand and fifteen thousand people from the border region trusting the League to settle the dispute 161 The League condemned the Greek invasion and called for both Greek withdrawal and compensation to Bulgaria 160 Liberia Edit Following accusations of forced labour on the large American owned Firestone rubber plantation and American accusations of slave trading the Liberian government asked the League to launch an investigation 162 The resulting commission was jointly appointed by the League the United States and Liberia 163 In 1930 a League report confirmed the presence of slavery and forced labour The report implicated many government officials in the selling of contract labour and recommended that they be replaced by Europeans or Americans which generated anger within Liberia and led to the resignation of President Charles D B King and his vice president The Liberian government outlawed forced labour and slavery and asked for American help in social reforms 163 164 Mukden Incident Japan seizes Manchuria from China 1931 1932 Edit Main article Mukden Incident Chinese delegate addressing the League of Nations concerning the Manchurian Crisis in 1932 The Mukden Incident also known as the Manchurian Incident was a decisive setback that weakened the League because its major members refused to tackle Japanese aggression Japan itself withdrew 165 166 Under the agreed terms of the Twenty One Demands with China the Japanese government had the right to station its troops in the area around the South Manchurian Railway a major trade route between the two countries in the Chinese region of Manchuria In September 1931 a section of the railway was lightly damaged by the Japanese Kwantung Army as a pretext for an invasion of Manchuria 167 168 The Japanese army claimed that Chinese soldiers had sabotaged the railway and in apparent retaliation acting contrary to orders from Tokyo 169 occupied all of Manchuria They renamed the area Manchukuo and on 9 March 1932 set up a puppet government with Pu Yi the former emperor of China as its executive head 170 The League of Nations sent observers The Lytton Report appeared a year later October 1932 It declared Japan to be the aggressor and demanded Manchuria be returned to China The report passed 42 1 in the Assembly in 1933 only Japan voting against but instead of removing its troops from China Japan withdrew from the League 171 In the end as British historian Charles Mowat argued collective security was dead The League and the ideas of collective security and the rule of law were defeated partly because of indifference and of sympathy with the aggressor but partly because the League powers were unprepared preoccupied with other matters and too slow to perceive the scale of Japanese ambitions 172 Chaco War Edit Main article Chaco War The League failed to prevent the 1932 war between Bolivia and Paraguay over the arid Gran Chaco region Although the region was sparsely populated it contained the Paraguay River which would have given either landlocked country access to the Atlantic Ocean 173 and there was also speculation later proved incorrect that the Chaco would be a rich source of petroleum 174 Border skirmishes throughout the late 1920s culminated in an all out war in 1932 when the Bolivian army attacked the Paraguayans at Fort Carlos Antonio Lopez at Lake Pitiantuta 175 Paraguay appealed to the League of Nations but the League did not take action when the Pan American Conference offered to mediate instead The war was a disaster for both sides causing 57 000 casualties for Bolivia whose population was around three million and 36 000 dead for Paraguay whose population was approximately one million 176 It also brought both countries to the brink of economic disaster By the time a ceasefire was negotiated on 12 June 1935 Paraguay had seized control of most of the region as was later recognised by the 1938 truce 177 Italian invasion of Abyssinia Edit Main articles Abyssinia Crisis and Second Italo Abyssinian War Emperor Haile Selassie I going into exile in Bath England via Jerusalem In October 1935 Italian dictator Benito Mussolini sent 400 000 troops to invade Abyssinia Ethiopia 178 Marshal Pietro Badoglio led the campaign from November 1935 ordering bombing the use of chemical weapons such as mustard gas and the poisoning of water supplies against targets which included undefended villages and medical facilities 178 179 The modern Italian Army defeated the poorly armed Abyssinians and captured Addis Ababa in May 1936 forcing Emperor of Ethiopia Haile Selassie to flee to exile in England 180 The League of Nations condemned Italy s aggression and imposed economic sanctions in November 1935 but the sanctions were largely ineffective since they did not ban the sale of oil or close the Suez Canal controlled by Britain 181 As Stanley Baldwin the British Prime Minister later observed this was ultimately because no one had the military forces on hand to withstand an Italian attack 182 In October 1935 the US president Franklin D Roosevelt invoked the recently passed Neutrality Acts and placed an embargo on arms and munitions to both sides but extended a further moral embargo to the belligerent Italians including other trade items On 5 October and later on 29 February 1936 the United States endeavoured with limited success to limit its exports of oil and other materials to normal peacetime levels 183 The League sanctions were lifted on 4 July 1936 but by that point Italy had already gained control of the urban areas of Abyssinia 184 The Hoare Laval Pact of December 1935 was an attempt by the British Foreign Secretary Samuel Hoare and the French Prime Minister Pierre Laval to end the conflict in Abyssinia by proposing to partition the country into an Italian sector and an Abyssinian sector Mussolini was prepared to agree to the pact but news of the deal leaked out Both the British and French public vehemently protested against it describing it as a sell out of Abyssinia Hoare and Laval were forced to resign and the British and French governments dissociated themselves from the two men 185 In June 1936 although there was no precedent for a head of state addressing the Assembly of the League of Nations in person Haile Selassie spoke to the Assembly appealing for its help in protecting his country 186 The Abyssinian crisis showed how the League could be influenced by the self interest of its members 187 one of the reasons why the sanctions were not very harsh was that both Britain and France feared the prospect of driving Mussolini and Adolf Hitler into an alliance 188 Spanish Civil War Edit Main article Spanish Civil War On 17 July 1936 the Spanish Army launched a coup d etat leading to a prolonged armed conflict between Spanish Republicans the elected leftist national government and the Nationalists conservative anti communist rebels who included most officers of the Spanish Army 189 Julio Alvarez del Vayo the Spanish Minister of Foreign Affairs appealed to the League in September 1936 for arms to defend Spain s territorial integrity and political independence The League members would not intervene in the Spanish Civil War nor prevent foreign intervention in the conflict Adolf Hitler and Mussolini aided General Francisco Franco s Nationalists while the Soviet Union helped the Spanish Republic In February 1937 the League did ban foreign volunteers but this was in practice a symbolic move 190 The result was a Nationalist victory in 1939 and confirmation to all observers that the League was ineffective in dealing with a major issue 191 Second Sino Japanese War Edit Main article Second Sino Japanese War Following a long record of instigating localised conflicts throughout the 1930s Japan began a full scale invasion of China on 7 July 1937 On 12 September the Chinese representative Wellington Koo appealed to the League for international intervention Western countries were sympathetic to the Chinese in their struggle particularly in their stubborn defence of Shanghai a city with a substantial number of foreigners 192 The League was unable to provide any practical measures on 4 October it turned the case over to the Nine Power Treaty Conference 193 194 Soviet invasion of Finland Edit Main article Winter war The Nazi Soviet Pact of 23 August 1939 contained secret protocols outlining spheres of interest Finland and the Baltic states as well as eastern Poland fell into the Soviet sphere After invading Poland on 17 September 1939 on 30 November the Soviets invaded Finland Then the League of Nations for the first time expelled a member who had violated the Covenant 195 The League action of 14 December 1939 stung because the Soviet Union became the only League member ever to suffer such an indignity 196 197 Failure of disarmament EditFurther information World Disarmament Conference Article 8 of the Covenant gave the League the task of reducing armaments to the lowest point consistent with national safety and the enforcement by common action of international obligations 198 Haakon Ikonomou argues that the Disarmament Section was a major failure It was distrusted by the great powers and given little autonomy by the Secretariat Its mediocre staffers generated information that was unreliable and caused unrealistic expectations in the general public 199 Successes Edit The League scored some successes including the 1925 Conference for the Supervision of the International Trade in Arms and Ammunition and in Implements of War It started to collect international arms data Most important was the passage in 1925 of the Geneva protocol banning poison gas in war 200 It reflected strong worldwide public opinion although the United States did not ratify it until 1975 201 Failures Edit The League had numerous failures and shortfalls In 1921 it set up the Temporary Mixed Commission on Armaments to explore possibilities for disarmament It was made up not of government representatives but of famous individuals They rarely agreed Proposals ranged from abolishing chemical warfare and strategic bombing to the limitation of more conventional weapons such as tanks Geneva Protocol of 1924 Edit Main article Geneva Protocol 1924 A draft treaty was assembled in 1923 that made aggressive war illegal and bound the member states to defend victims of aggression by force Since the onus of responsibility would in practice be on the great powers of the League it was vetoed by Great Britain who feared that this pledge would strain its own commitment to police its British Empire 202 The Geneva Protocol for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes was a proposal by British Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald and his French counterpart Edouard Herriot It set up compulsory arbitration of disputes and created a method to determine the aggressor in international conflicts All legal disputes between nations would be submitted to the World Court It called for a disarmament conference in 1925 Any government that refused to comply in a dispute would be named an aggressor Any victim of aggression was to receive immediate assistance from League members British Conservatives condemned the proposal for fear that it would lead to conflict with the United States which also opposed the proposal The British Dominions strongly opposed it The Conservatives came to power in Britain and in March 1925 the proposal was shelved and never reintroduced 203 World Disarmament Conference Edit Main article World Disarmament Conference The Allied powers were also under obligation by the Treaty of Versailles to attempt to disarm and the armament restrictions imposed on the defeated countries had been described as the first step toward worldwide disarmament 204 The League Covenant assigned the League the task of creating a disarmament plan for each state but the Council devolved this responsibility to a special commission set up in 1926 to prepare for the 1932 1934 World Disarmament Conference 205 Members of the League held different views towards the issue The French were reluctant to reduce their armaments without a guarantee of military help if they were attacked Poland and Czechoslovakia felt vulnerable to attack from the west and wanted the League s response to aggression against its members to be strengthened before they disarmed 206 Without this guarantee they would not reduce armaments because they felt the risk of attack from Germany was too great Fear of attack increased as Germany regained its strength after the First World War especially after Adolf Hitler gained power and became German Chancellor in 1933 In particular Germany s attempts to overturn the Treaty of Versailles and the reconstruction of the German military made France increasingly unwilling to disarm 205 The World Disarmament Conference was convened by the League of Nations in Geneva in 1932 with representatives from 60 states It was a failure 207 A one year moratorium on the expansion of armaments later extended by a few months was proposed at the start of the conference 208 The Disarmament Commission obtained initial agreement from France Italy Spain Japan and Britain to limit the size of their navies but no final agreement was reached Ultimately the Commission failed to halt the military build up by Germany Italy Spain and Japan during the 1930s 209 Helpless during Coming of World War II Edit The League was mostly silent in the face of major events leading to the Second World War such as Hitler s remilitarisation of the Rhineland occupation of the Sudetenland and Anschluss of Austria which had been forbidden by the Treaty of Versailles In fact League members themselves re armed In 1933 Japan simply withdrew from the League rather than submit to its judgement 210 as did Germany the same year using the failure of the World Disarmament Conference to agree to arms parity between France and Germany as a pretext Italy and Spain in 1937 211 The final significant act of the League was to expel the Soviet Union in December 1939 after it invaded Finland 212 General weaknesses Edit The Gap in the Bridge the sign reads This League of Nations Bridge was designed by the President of the U S A Cartoon from Punch magazine 10 December 1920 satirising the gap left by the US not joining the League The onset of the Second World War demonstrated that the League had failed in its primary purpose the prevention of another world war There were a variety of reasons for this failure many connected to general weaknesses within the organisation Additionally the power of the League was limited by the United States refusal to join 213 Origins and structure Edit The origins of the League as an organisation created by the Allied powers as part of the peace settlement to end the First World War led to it being viewed as a League of Victors 214 215 The League s neutrality tended to manifest itself as indecision It required a unanimous vote of nine later fifteen Council members to enact a resolution hence conclusive and effective action was difficult if not impossible It was also slow in coming to its decisions as certain ones required the unanimous consent of the entire Assembly This problem mainly stemmed from the fact that the primary members of the League of Nations were not willing to accept the possibility of their fate being decided by other countries and by enforcing unanimous voting had effectively given themselves veto power 216 217 Global representation Edit Representation at the League was often a problem Though it was intended to encompass all nations many never joined or their period of membership was short The most conspicuous absentee was the United States President Woodrow Wilson had been a driving force behind the League s formation and strongly influenced the form it took but the US Senate voted not to join on 19 November 1919 218 Ruth Henig has suggested that had the United States become a member it would have also provided support to France and Britain possibly making France feel more secure and so encouraging France and Britain to co operate more fully regarding Germany thus making the rise to power of the Nazi Party less likely 219 Conversely Henig acknowledges that if the US had been a member its reluctance to engage in war with European states or to enact economic sanctions might have hampered the ability of the League to deal with international incidents 219 The structure of the US federal government might also have made its membership problematic as its representatives at the League would only be able to answer on behalf of the executive branch certain League decisions such as to go to war would always require prior approval of the legislative branch regardless of the outcome of any floor vote even 220 In January 1920 when the League was born Germany was not permitted to join because it was seen as having been the aggressor in the First World War Soviet Russia was also initially excluded because Communist regimes were not welcomed and membership would have been initially dubious due to the ongoing Russian Civil War in which both sides claimed to be the legitimate government of the country The League was further weakened when major powers left in the 1930s Japan began as a permanent member of the Council since the country was an Allied Power in the First World War but withdrew in 1933 after the League voiced opposition to its occupation of Manchuria 221 Italy also began as a permanent member of the council However the League staunchly opposed Italy s invasion of Ethiopia in 1934 When the war ended in an Italian conquest the League refused to recognize Italian sovereignty over Ethiopia prompting the Italian Fascist government to withdraw from the organization altogether in 1937 Though neutral during World War I Spain then still a kingdom also began as a permanent member of the council but withdrew in 1939 after the Spanish Civil War ended in a victory for the Nationalists Though world opinion was much more divided over the Spanish Civil than the conflicts involving Japan and Italy the general perception leaned in favor of the Republican cause The League had accepted Germany also as a permanent member of the council in 1926 deeming it to have become a peace loving country under the Weimar Republic After the Nazis came to power in 1933 Adolf Hitler withdrew Germany almost immediately 222 Collective security Edit Another important weakness grew from the contradiction between the idea of collective security that formed the basis of the League and international relations between individual states 223 The League s collective security system required nations to act if necessary against states they considered friendly and in a way that might endanger their national interests to support states for which they had no normal affinity 223 This weakness was exposed during the Abyssinia Crisis when Britain and France had to balance maintaining the security they had attempted to create for themselves in Europe to defend against the enemies of internal order 224 in which Italy s support played a pivotal role with their obligations to Abyssinia as a member of the League 225 On 23 June 1936 in the wake of the collapse of League efforts to restrain Italy s war against Abyssinia the British Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin told the House of Commons that collective security hadfailed ultimately because of the reluctance of nearly all the nations in Europe to proceed to what I might call military sanctions The real reason or the main reason was that we discovered in the process of weeks that there was no country except the aggressor country which was ready for war I f collective action is to be a reality and not merely a thing to be talked about it means not only that every country is to be ready for war but must be ready to go to war at once That is a terrible thing but it is an essential part of collective security 182 Ultimately Britain and France both abandoned the concept of collective security in favour of appeasement in the face of growing German militarism under Hitler 226 In this context the League of Nations was also the institution where the first international debate on terrorism took place following the 1934 assassination of King Alexander I of Yugoslavia in Marseille France This debate established precedents regarding global surveillence in the form of routine international sharing of surveillence data the punishment of terrorists as an international rather than national matter and the right of a nation to conduct military attacks within another nation as a response to international terrorism Many of these concepts are detectable in the discourse of terrorism among states after 9 11 227 American diplomatic historian Samuel Flagg Bemis originally supported the League but after two decades changed his mind The League of Nations has been a disappointing failure It has been a failure not because the United States did not join it but because the great powers have been unwilling to apply sanctions except where it suited their individual national interests to do so and because Democracy on which the original concepts of the League rested for support has collapsed over half the world 228 Pacifism disarmament and radio Edit The League of Nations lacked an armed force of its own and depended on the Great Powers to enforce its resolutions which they were very unwilling to do 229 Its two most important members Britain and France were reluctant to use sanctions and even more reluctant to resort to military action on behalf of the League 230 Immediately after the First World War pacifism became a strong force among both the people and governments of the two countries The British Conservatives were especially tepid to the League and preferred when in government to negotiate treaties without the involvement of that organisation 231 Moreover the League s advocacy of disarmament for Britain France and its other members while at the same time advocating collective security meant that the League was depriving itself of the only forceful means by which it could uphold its authority 232 David Goodman argues that the 1936 League of Nations Convention on the Use of Broadcasting in the Cause of Peace tried to create the standards for a liberal international public sphere The Convention encouraged friendly radio broadcasts to other nations It called for League prohibitions on international broadcasts containing hostile speech and false claims It tried to draw the line between liberal and illiberal policies in communications and emphasized the dangers of nationalist chauvinism With Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia active on the radio its liberal goals were ignored while liberals warned that the code represented restraints on free speech 233 Demise and legacy Edit World map showing member states of the League of Nations in green and red on 18 April 1946 when the League of Nations ceased to exist League of Nations archives Geneva 234 As the situation in Europe escalated into war the Assembly transferred enough power to the Secretary General on 30 September 1938 and 14 December 1939 to allow the League to continue to exist legally and carry on reduced operations 114 The headquarters of the League the Palace of Nations remained unoccupied for nearly six years until the Second World War ended 235 At the 1943 Tehran Conference the Allied powers agreed to create a new body to replace the League the United Nations Many League bodies such as the International Labour Organization continued to function and eventually became affiliated with the UN 89 The designers of the structures of the United Nations intended to make it more effective than the League 236 The final meeting of the League of Nations took place on 18 April 1946 in Geneva 237 Delegates from 34 nations attended the assembly 238 This session concerned itself with liquidating the League it transferred assets worth approximately 22 000 000 U S in 1946 239 including the Palace of Nations and the League s archives to the UN returned reserve funds to the nations that had supplied them and settled the debts of the League 238 Robert Cecil addressing the final session said Let us boldly state that aggression wherever it occurs and however it may be defended is an international crime that it is the duty of every peace loving state to resent it and employ whatever force is necessary to crush it that the machinery of the Charter no less than the machinery of the Covenant is sufficient for this purpose if properly used and that every well disposed citizen of every state should be ready to undergo any sacrifice in order to maintain peace I venture to impress upon my hearers that the great work of peace is resting not only on the narrow interests of our own nations but even more on those great principles of right and wrong which nations like individuals depend The League is dead Long live the United Nations 238 The Assembly passed a resolution that With effect from the day following the close of the present session of the Assembly i e April 19 the League of Nations shall cease to exist except for the sole purpose of the liquidation of its affairs as provided in the present resolution 240 A Board of Liquidation consisting of nine persons from different countries spent the next 15 months overseeing the transfer of the League s assets and functions to the United Nations or specialised bodies finally dissolving itself on 31 July 1947 240 The archive of the League of Nations was transferred to the United Nations Office at Geneva and is now an entry in the UNESCO Memory of the World Register 241 In the past few decades by research using the League Archives at Geneva historians have reviewed the legacy of the League of Nations as the United Nations has faced similar troubles to those of the interwar period Current consensus views that even though the League failed to achieve its ultimate goal of world peace it did manage to build new roads towards expanding the rule of law across the globe strengthened the concept of collective security giving a voice to smaller nations helped to raise awareness to problems like epidemics slavery child labour colonial tyranny refugee crises and general working conditions through its numerous commissions and committees and paved the way for new forms of statehood as the mandate system put the colonial powers under international observation 9 Professor David Kennedy portrays the League as a unique moment when international affairs were institutionalised as opposed to the pre First World War methods of law and politics 10 The principal Allies in the Second World War the UK the USSR France the U S and the Republic of China became permanent members of the United Nations Security Council in 1946 in 1971 the People s Republic of China replaced the Republic of China then only in control of Taiwan as a permanent member of the UN Security Council and in 1991 the Russian Federation assumed the seat of the dissolved USSR Decisions of the Security Council are binding on all members of the UN and unanimous decisions are not required unlike in the League Council Only the five permanent members of the Security Council can wield a veto to protect their vital interests 242 League of Nations archives EditMain article League of Nations archives The League of Nations archives is a collection of the League s records and documents It consists of approximately 15 million pages of content dating from the inception of the League of Nations in 1919 extending through its dissolution in 1946 It is located at the United Nations Office at Geneva 243 In 2017 the UN Library amp Archives Geneva launched the Total Digital Access to the League of Nations Archives Project LONTAD with the intention of preserving digitizing and providing online access to the League of Nations archives It was completed in 2022 244 See also Edit Politics portal World War I portalInternational relations 1919 1939 Latin America and the League of Nations League against Imperialism League of Small and Subject Nationalities Minority rightsCitations Edit Christian Tomuschat 1995 The United Nations at Age Fifty A Legal Perspective Martinus Nijhoff Publishers p 77 ISBN 978 90 411 0145 7 Covenant of the League of Nations The Avalon Project Archived from the original on 26 July 2011 Retrieved 30 August 2011 See Article 23 Covenant of the League of Nations Archived from the original on 26 July 2011 Retrieved 20 April 2009 Treaty of Versailles Archived from the original on 19 January 2010 Retrieved 23 January 2010 and Minority Treaties Jahanpour Farhang The Elusiveness of Trust the experience of Security Council and Iran PDF Transnational Foundation of Peace and Future Research p 2 Archived PDF from the original on 27 July 2014 Retrieved 27 June 2008 Osakwe C O 1972 The participation of the Soviet Union in universal international organizations A political and legal analysis of Soviet strategies and aspirations inside ILO UNESCO and WHO Springer p 5 ISBN 978 90 286 0002 7 Pericles Lewis 2000 Modernism Nationalism and the Novel Cambridge University Press p 52 ISBN 978 1 139 42658 9 Ginneken Anique H M van 2006 Historical Dictionary of the League of Nations Scarecrow Press p 174 ISBN 978 0 8108 6513 6 Ellis Charles Howard 2003 The Origin Structure amp Working of the League of Nations Lawbook Exchange Ltd p 169 ISBN 978 1 58477 320 7 a b Pedersen Susan October 2007 Back to the League of Nations The American Historical Review American Historical Review 112 4 1091 1117 doi 10 1086 ahr 112 4 1091 JSTOR 40008445 a b Kennedy 1987 Kant Immanuel Perpetual Peace A Philosophical Sketch Mount Holyoke College Archived from the original on 14 May 2008 Retrieved 16 May 2008 Skirbekk amp Gilje 2001 p 288 Kant Immanuel 1795 Perpetual Peace Constitution Society Archived from the original on 7 October 2011 Retrieved 30 August 2011 Reichard 2006 p 9 Rapoport 1995 pp 498 500 Bouchet Saulnier Brav amp Olivier 2007 pp 14 134 Northedge F S 1986 The League of Nations Its life and times 1920 1946 Leicester University Press p 10 ISBN 978 0 7185 1194 4 Morris Charles 1910 The Marvelous Career of Theodore Roosevelt Including what He Has Done and Stands For His Early Life and Public Services the Story of His African Trip His Memorable Journey Through Europe and His Enthusiastic Welcome Home John C Winston Company p 370 Before the League of Nations The United Nations Office at Geneva Archived from the original on 9 December 2008 Retrieved 14 June 2008 a b c Northedge F S 1986 The League of Nations Its life and times 1920 1946 Leicester University Press ISBN 978 0 7185 1194 4 Sir Alfred Eckhard Zimmern 1969 The League of Nations and the Rule of Law 1918 1935 Russell amp Russell pp 13 22 A Woman s Peace Party Full Fledged for Action The Survey XXXIII 17 433 434 23 January 1915 Retrieved 31 August 2017 Everard amp de Haan 2016 pp 64 65 van der Veen Sietske 22 June 2017 Hirschmann Susanna Theodora Cornelia 1871 1957 Huygens ING in Dutch Huygens Institute for the History of the Netherlands Archived from the original on 30 August 2017 Retrieved 30 August 2017 Jacobs 1996 p 94 Caravantes 2004 pp 101 103 Wiltsher 1985 pp 110 125 a b Victory Democracy Peace Make them secure by a League of Nations The New York Times 25 December 1918 p 11 Dubin Martin David 1970 Toward the Concept of Collective Security The Bryce Group s Proposals for the Avoidance of War 1914 1917 International Organization 24 2 288 318 doi 10 1017 S0020818300025911 JSTOR 2705943 S2CID 144909907 Leonard Woolf 2010 International Government BiblioBazaar ISBN 978 1 177 95293 4 Yearwood Peter 1989 On the Safe and Right Lines The Lloyd George Government and the Origins of the League of Nations 1916 1918 The Historical Journal 32 131 155 doi 10 1017 s0018246x00015338 S2CID 159466156 Bell 2007 p 16 Archer 2001 p 14 Bell 2007 p 8 a b c d The League of Nations Karl J Schmidt American History Archived from the original on 19 December 2013 Retrieved 10 December 2013 Text of the President s Two Speeches in Paris Stating His Views of the Bases of a Lasting Peace The New York Times 15 December 1918 p 1 The League of Nations a retreat from international law PDF Journal of Global History Archived PDF from the original on 14 December 2013 Retrieved 10 December 2013 Thompson J A 1977 Lord Cecil and the Pacifists in the League of Nations Union The Historical Journal 20 4 949 959 doi 10 1017 s0018246x00011481 S2CID 154899222 Heyns Christof 1995 The Preamble of the United Nations Charter The Contribution of Jan Smuts African Journal of International and Comparative Law 7 329 Clavin Patricia 2020 Britain and the Making of Global Order after 1919 Twentieth Century British History 31 3 340 359 doi 10 1093 tcbh hwaa007 Morefield Jeanne 2020 Families of mankind British liberty League internationalism and the traffic in women and children History of European Ideas 46 5 681 696 doi 10 1080 01916599 2020 1746085 S2CID 216501883 Wright Susannah 2020 Creating liberal internationalist world citizens League of Nations Union junior branches in English secondary schools 1919 1939 Paedagogica Historica 56 3 321 340 doi 10 1080 00309230 2018 1538252 S2CID 149886714 Getachew Adom 2019 Worldmaking after Empire The Rise and Fall of Self Determination Princeton University Press pp 37 52 doi 10 2307 j ctv3znwvg ISBN 978 0 691 17915 5 JSTOR j ctv3znwvg S2CID 242525007 David Hunter Miller 1969 The drafting of the Covenant Johnson Reprint Corp Magliveras 1999 p 8 Magliveras 1999 pp 8 12 Northedge 1986 pp 35 36 a b Inter Allied Women s Conference in Paris The Sydney Morning Herald 23 May 1919 p 5 Archived from the original on 1 September 2017 Retrieved 31 August 2017 via Newspapers com Women and the Peace Conference The Manchester Guardian 18 February 1919 p 5 Archived from the original on 1 September 2017 Retrieved 31 August 2017 via Newspapers com Drexel Constance 15 March 1919 Women Gain Victory at Paris Conference Los Angeles Times p 2 Archived from the original on 1 September 2017 Retrieved 31 August 2017 via Newspapers com a b Wiltsher 1985 pp 200 202 Meyer amp Prugl 1999 p 20 Pietila 1999 p 2 Wiltsher 1985 p 212 Levinovitz amp Ringertz 2001 p 170 Hewes James E 1970 Henry Cabot Lodge and the League of Nations Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 114 4 245 255 JSTOR 985951 Scott 1973 p 51 Scott 1973 p 67 League of Nations Chronology Archived 4 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine The United Nations Office at Geneva Carole Fink The great powers in the new international system 1919 1923 in Paul Kennedy and William I Hitchcock eds From War to Peace Yale University Press 2000 pp 17 35 at page 24 Fink p 24 Tournes Ludovic 2018 American membership of the League of Nations US philanthropy and the transformation of an intergovernmental organisation into a think tank International Politics 55 6 852 869 doi 10 1057 s41311 017 0110 4 S2CID 149155486 League of Nations 1935 p 22 Language and Emblem United Nations Archived from the original on 23 September 2011 Retrieved 15 September 2011 Grandjean Martin 2017 Complex structures and international organizations Analisi e visualizzazioni delle reti in storia L esempio della cooperazione intellettuale della Societa delle Nazioni Memoria e Ricerca 2 371 393 doi 10 14647 87204 Archived from the original on 7 November 2017 Retrieved 31 October 2017 See also French version Archived 7 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine PDF and English summary Archived 2 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine Northedge 1986 pp 48 66 Budget of the League University of Indiana Archived from the original on 23 August 2011 Retrieved 5 October 2011 Northedge 1986 pp 48 49 Northedge 1986 p 53 Northedge 1986 p 50 League of Nations Secretariat 1919 1946 United Nations Office at Geneva Archived from the original on 12 December 2011 Retrieved 15 September 2011 Main Organs of the League of Nations UN GENEVA 16 December 1920 Retrieved 24 February 2023 a b Organization and establishment The main bodies of the League of Nations The United Nations Office at Geneva Archived from the original on 9 December 2008 Retrieved 18 May 2008 Northedge 1986 p 72 Northedge 1986 pp 48 50 Northedge 1986 p 48 Northedge 1986 pp 42 48 a b League of Nations Photo Archive University of Indiana Archived from the original on 9 September 2011 Retrieved 15 September 2011 Chronology 1939 University of Indiana Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 15 September 2011 Grandjean Martin 2016 Archives Distant Reading Mapping the Activity of the League of Nations Intellectual Cooperation Archived 15 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine In Digital Humanities 2016 pp 531 534 League of Nations National Library of Australia Archived from the original on 12 October 2011 Retrieved 15 September 2011 Health Organisation Correspondence 1926 1938 National Library of Medicine a b The International Health Organization Of The League Of Nations The British Medical Journal 1 3302 672 675 1924 ISSN 0007 1447 JSTOR 20436330 Demise and Legacy United Nations Office at Geneva Archived from the original on 23 September 2011 Retrieved 15 September 2011 Permanent Court of International Justice University of Indiana Archived from the original on 27 August 2011 Retrieved 15 September 2011 a b Northedge 1986 pp 179 80 Scott 1973 p 53 Frowein amp Rudiger 2000 p 167 a b Origins and history International Labour Organization Archived from the original on 27 April 2008 Retrieved 25 April 2008 Howard Jones Norman 1979 International public health between the two world wars the organizational problems World Health Organization hdl 10665 39249 ISBN 978 92 4 156058 0 Northedge 1986 p 182 Baumslag 2005 p 8 Tworek Heidi J S 2019 Communicable Disease Information Health and Globalization in the Interwar Period The American Historical Review 124 3 813 842 doi 10 1093 ahr rhz577 McAllister 1999 pp 76 77 Grandjean 2018 Northedge 1986 pp 186 187 Northedge 1986 pp 187 189 a b Northedge 1986 pp 185 86 British Cabinet Paper 161 35 on the Italo Ethiopian Dispute and exhibiting a Report of the Inter Departmental Committee on British interests in Ethiopia dated 18 June 1935 and submitted to Cabinet by Sir John Maffey Northedge 1986 p 166 The Encyclopedia Americana Volume 25 Americana Corporation 1976 p 24 Nansen International Office for Refugees Nobel Media Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 30 August 2011 a b Northedge 1986 p 77 Scott 1973 p 59 Walsh Ben Scott Baumann Michael 2013 Cambridge Igcse Modern World History Hodder Education Group p 35 ISBN 978 1 4441 6442 8 Torpey 2000 p 129 Ludi Regula 2019 Setting New Standards International Feminism and the League of Nations Inquiry into the Status of Women PDF Journal of Women s History 31 12 36 doi 10 1353 jowh 2019 0001 S2CID 150543084 Archived PDF from the original on 24 November 2020 de Haan Francisca 25 February 2010 A Brief Survey of Women s Rights UN Chronicle United Nations Archived from the original on 16 October 2011 Retrieved 15 September 2011 Hill M 1946 The Economic and Financial Organization of the League of Nations ISBN 978 0 598 68778 4 Chronology of the League of Nations PDF United Nations Office at Geneva Archived PDF from the original on 25 May 2017 Retrieved 9 October 2018 National Membership of the League of Nations University of Indiana Archived from the original on 9 September 2011 Retrieved 15 September 2011 Tripp 2002 p 75 a b Scott 1973 pp 312 398 a b Magliveras 1999 p 31 Northedge 1986 pp 192 193 Myers Denys P July 1921 The Mandate System of the League of Nations Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 96 74 77 doi 10 1177 000271622109600116 S2CID 144465753 Northedge 1986 p 193 Northedge 1986 p 198 Northedge 1986 p 195 a b c League of Nations 1924 The Covenant of the League of Nations Article 22 The Avalon Project at Yale Law School Archived from the original on 26 July 2011 Retrieved 20 April 2009 Northedge 1986 pp 194 195 Northedge 1986 p 216 The United Nations and Decolonization United Nations Archived from the original on 3 September 2011 Retrieved 15 September 2011 Northedge 1986 pp 73 75 Northedge 1986 pp 70 72 Henig 1973 p 170 a b Scott 1973 p 60 Northedge 1986 pp 77 78 Campbell F Gregory 1970 The Struggle for Upper Silesia 1919 1922 PDF The Journal of Modern History 42 3 361 385 doi 10 1086 243995 JSTOR 1905870 S2CID 144651093 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Osmanczyk amp Mango 2002 p 2568 a b Northedge 1986 p 88 Scott 1973 pp 83 Kalaja Deona Cali 2016 The admission of Albania in the League of Nations Journal of Liberty and International Affairs 1 3 55 68 Northedge 1986 pp 103 105 Scott 1973 p 86 Scott 1973 p 87 Northedge 1986 p 110 Matilda Spence Settlement of the Memel Controversy Current History 20 2 1924 233 238 online Northedge 1986 p 107 Caǧaptay Soner 2006 Islam secularism and nationalism in modern Turkey Taylor amp Francis pp 117 121 ISBN 978 0 415 38458 2 Scott 1973 p 133 Northedge 1986 pp 107 108 Scott 1973 pp 131 135 a b c Northedge 1986 p 78 Scott 1973 p 61 Scott 1973 p 62 Scott 1973 p 63 Northedge 1986 pp 78 79 Bell 2007 p 29 Crampton 1996 p 93 Osmanczyk amp Mango 2002 p 1314 Scott 1973 p 249 Bethell 1991 pp 414 415 Scott 1973 p 250 Scott 1973 p 251 Hudson Manley ed 1934 The verdict of the League World Peace Foundation pp 1 13 Northedge 1986 pp 72 73 Pollock James K 1935 International Affairs The Saar Plebiscite The American Political Science Review 29 2 275 282 doi 10 2307 1947508 JSTOR 1947508 S2CID 143303667 The United Nations in the Heart of Europe United Nations Archived from the original on 10 November 2011 Retrieved 15 September 2011 a b Northedge 1986 p 112 Scott 1973 pp 126 127 Miers 2003 pp 140 141 a b Miers 2003 p 188 Du Bois W E Burghardt July 1933 Liberia the League and the United States Foreign Affairs 11 4 682 95 doi 10 2307 20030546 JSTOR 20030546 Sara Rector Smith The Manchurian crisis 1931 1932 a tragedy in international relations 1970 Burkman Thomas W 2008 Japan and the League of Nations Empire and World Order 1914 1938 University of Hawai i Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2982 7 JSTOR j ctt6wqrcq Iriye 1987 p 8 Nish 1977 pp 176 178 Scott 1973 p 208 Northedge 1986 p 139 Northedge 1986 pp 156 161 Charles Loch Mowat Britain between the Wars 1918 1940 1955 p 420 Scott 1973 pp 242 243 Levy 2001 pp 21 22 Bethell 1991 p 495 Scott 1973 p 248 Scheina 2003 p 103 a b Northedge 1986 pp 222 225 Hill amp Garvey 1995 p 629 Northedge 1986 p 221 Baer 1976 p 245 a b Events Leading Up to World War II Library of Congress 1944 p 97 Baer 1976 p 71 Baer 1976 p 298 Baer 1976 pp 121 155 Haile Selassie I Appeal to The League of Nations June 1936 Geneva Switzerland Black King Archived from the original on 25 March 2008 Retrieved 6 June 2008 Baer 1976 p 303 Baer 1976 p 77 Lannon 2002 pp 25 29 Northedge 1986 pp 264 265 269 270 F P Walters A History of the League of Nations 1952 pp 721 730 789 791 Northedge 1986 p 270 van Slyke Lyman ed 1967 The China White Paper Stanford University Press p 10 Japanese Attack on China 1937 Mount Holyoke University Archived from the original on 31 August 2011 Retrieved 15 September 2011 Richard W Leopold The Growth of American Foreign Policy A history New York Alfred A Knopf 1964 pp 558 561 562 quote at 562 Stephen Kotkin Stalin Waiting for Hitler 1929 1941 New York Penguin 2017 p 729 quote Cf Winston Churchill The Gathering Storm Boston Houghton Mufflin 1948 pp 392 393 447 539 League of Nations 1924 The Covenant of the League of Nations Article 8 The Avalon Project at Yale Law School Archived from the original on 15 April 2016 Retrieved 17 May 2006 Ikonomou Haakon A 2021 The Administrative Anatomy of Failure The League of Nations Disarmament Section 1919 1925 Contemporary European History 30 3 321 334 doi 10 1017 s0960777320000624 S2CID 234162968 Webster Andrew 2005 Making Disarmament Work The Implementation of the International Disarmament Provisions in the League of Nations Covenant 1919 1925 Diplomacy amp Statecraft 16 3 551 569 doi 10 1080 09592290500208089 S2CID 154279428 Bunn G 1970 Gas and germ warfare International legal history and present status Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 65 1 253 260 Bibcode 1970PNAS 65 253B doi 10 1073 pnas 65 1 253 PMC 286219 PMID 4905669 Webster Andrew 2008 Absolutely Irresponsible Amateurs The Temporary Mixed Commission on Armaments 1921 1924 Australian Journal of Politics amp History 54 3 373 388 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8497 2008 00512 x Williams John F 1924 The Geneva Protocol of 1924 for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes Journal of the British Institute of International Affairs 3 6 288 304 doi 10 2307 3014555 JSTOR 3014555 Northedge 1986 pp 113 123 a b Northedge 1986 p 114 Henig 1973 p 173 Temperley A C 1938 The Whispering Gallery Of Europe Goldblat 2002 p 24 Eloranta Jari 2011 Why did the League of Nations fail Cliometrica 5 27 52 doi 10 1007 s11698 010 0049 9 S2CID 19944887 Harries Meirion and Susie 1991 Soldiers of the Sun The Rise and Fall of the Imperial Japanese Army p 163 ISBN 978 0 394 56935 2 Northedge 1986 pp 47 133 Northedge 1986 p 273 Northedge 1986 pp 276 278 Gorodetsky 1994 p 26 Raffo 1974 p 1 Birn Donald S 1981 The League of Nations Union Clarendon Press pp 226 227 ISBN 978 0 19 822650 5 Northedge 1986 pp 279 282 288 292 Knock 1995 p 263 a b Henig 1973 p 175 Henig 1973 p 176 McDonough 1997 p 62 McDonough 1997 p 69 a b Northedge 1986 p 253 Northedge 1986 p 254 Northedge 1986 pp 253 254 McDonough 1997 p 74 Ditrych Ondrej 2013 International Terrorism as Conspiracy Debating Terrorism in the League of Nations Historical Social Research 38 1 Quoted in Jerald A Combs American diplomatic history two centuries of changing interpretations 1983 p 158 McDonough 1997 pp 54 5 Mulder Nicholas 2022 The Economic Weapon The Rise of Sanctions as a Tool of Modern War ISBN 978 0300259360 Northedge 1986 pp 238 240 Northedge 1986 pp 134 135 Goodman David 2020 Liberal and Illiberal Internationalism in the Making of the League of Nations Convention on Broadcasting in the Cause of Peace Journal of World History 31 165 193 doi 10 1353 jwh 2020 0006 S2CID 212950904 League of Nations archives United Nations Office in Geneva Network visualization and analysis published in Grandjean Martin 2014 La connaissance est un reseau Les Cahiers du Numerique 10 3 37 54 doi 10 3166 lcn 10 3 37 54 Archived from the original on 27 June 2015 Retrieved 15 October 2014 Scott 1973 p 399 Northedge 1986 pp 278 280 League of Nations Chronology Archived 30 December 2004 at the Wayback Machine Philip J Strollo a b c Scott 1973 p 404 League of Nations Ends Gives Way to New U N Syracuse Herald American 20 April 1946 p 12 a b Denys P Myers 1948 Liquidation of League of Nations Functions The American Journal of International Law 42 2 320 354 doi 10 2307 2193676 JSTOR 2193676 S2CID 146828849 League of Nations Archives 1919 1946 UNESCO Memory of the World Programme Archived from the original on 30 September 2008 Retrieved 7 September 2009 Northedge 1986 pp 278 281 United Nations Library of Geneva 1978 Guide to the Archives of the League of Nations 1919 1946 United Nations p 19 ISBN 978 92 1 200347 4 Digitization Programmes Total Digital Access to the League of Nations Archives LONTAD Project United Nations Geneva Archived from the original on 8 May 2020 Retrieved 18 December 2019 General and cited references EditSurveys Edit Bendiner Elmer A time for angels the tragicomic history of the League of Nations 1975 well written popular history Brierly J L and P A Reynolds The League of Nations The New Cambridge Modern History Vol XII The Shifting Balance of World Forces 2nd ed 1968 Chapter IX Cecil Lord Robert 1922 League of Nations In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica 12th ed London amp New York The Encyclopaedia Britannica Company Gill George The League of Nations from 1929 to 1946 1996 online Ginneken Anique H M van Historical Dictionary of the League of Nations 2006 excerpt and text search Henig Ruth B ed 1973 The League of Nations Oliver and Boyd ISBN 978 0 05 002592 5 Henig Ruth The Peace that Never was A History of the League of Nations Haus Publishing 2019 a standard scholarly history Housden Martyn The League of Nations and the organisation of peace 2012 online Ikonomou Haakon Karen Gram Skjoldager eds The League of Nations Perspectives from the Present Aarhus University Press 2019 online review Joyce James Avery Broken star the story of the League of Nations 1919 1939 1978 online Myers Denys P Handbook of the League of Nations a comprehensive account of its structure operation and activities 1935 online Northedge F S 1986 The League of Nations Its Life and Times 1920 1946 Holmes amp Meier ISBN 978 0 7185 1316 0 Ostrower Gary B The League of Nations From 1919 to 1929 1996 online brief survey Pedersen Susan The Guardians the League of Nations and the crisis of empire 2015 online in depth scholarly history of the mandate system Raffo P 1974 The League of Nations The Historical Association Scott George 1973 The Rise and Fall of the League of Nations Hutchinson amp Co LTD ISBN 978 0 09 117040 0 online Steiner Zara The Lights that Failed European International History 1919 1933 Oxford University Press 2005 Steiner Zara The triumph of the dark European international history 1933 1939 Oxford University Press 2011 Temperley A C The Whispering Gallery Of Europe 1938 highly influential account of League esp disarmament conference of 1932 34 online Walters F P 1952 A History of the League of Nations Oxford University Press online free the standard scholarly history League topics Edit Akami Tomoko 2017 Imperial polities intercolonialism and the shaping of global governing norms Public health expert networks in Asia and the League of Nations Health Organization 1908 37 Journal of Global History 12 4 25 doi 10 1017 s1740022816000310 S2CID 159733645 Azcarate P de League of Nations and National Minorities 1945 online Barros James Office Without Power Secretary General Sir Eric Drummond 1919 1933 Oxford 1979 Barros James The Corfu incident of 1923 Mussolini and the League of Nations Princeton UP 2015 Borowy Iris Coming to terms with world health the League of Nations Health Organisation 1921 1946 Peter Lang 2009 Burkman Thomas W Japan and the League of Nations Empire and world order 1914 1938 U of Hawaii Press 2008 Caravantes Peggy 2004 Waging Peace The story of Jane Addams 1st ed Morgan Reynolds ISBN 978 1 931798 40 2 Chaudron Gerald New Zealand in the League of Nations The Beginnings of an Independent Foreign Policy 1919 1939 2014 Clavin Patricia Securing the world economy the reinvention of the League of Nations 1920 1946 Oxford UP 2013 Cooper John Milton Breaking the Heart of the World Woodrow Wilson and the Fight for the League of Nations 2001 454pp excerpt and text search a major scholarly study Ditrych Ondrej 2013 International terrorism in the League of Nations and the contemporary terrorism dispositif Critical Studies on Terrorism 6 2 225 240 doi 10 1080 17539153 2013 764103 S2CID 144906326 Dykmann Klaas 2015 How International was the Secretariat of the League of Nations The International History Review 37 4 721 744 doi 10 1080 07075332 2014 966134 S2CID 154908318 Egerton George W 1978 Great Britain and the Creation of the League of Nations Strategy Politics and International Organization 1914 1919 University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 807 81320 1 Eloranta Jari 2011 Why did the League of Nations fail Cliometrica 5 27 52 doi 10 1007 s11698 010 0049 9 S2CID 19944887 Gill George 1996 The League of Nations from 1929 to 1946 Avery Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 89529 637 5 Gram Skjoldager Karen Ikonomou Haakon A 2019 Making Sense of the League of Nations Secretariat Historiographical and Conceptual Reflections on Early International Public Administration European History Quarterly 49 3 420 444 doi 10 1177 0265691419854634 S2CID 199157356 Grandjean Martin 2018 Les reseaux de la cooperation intellectuelle La Societe des Nations comme actrice des echanges scientifiques et culturels dans l entre deux guerres The Networks of Intellectual Cooperation The League of Nations as an Actor of the Scientific and Cultural Exchanges in the Inter War Period phdthesis in French Universite de Lausanne Edward Grey 1st Viscount Grey of Fallodon 1918 The League of Nations 1st ed London WHSmith Wikidata Q105700467 Gotz Norbert 2005 On the Origins of Parliamentary Diplomacy Cooperation and Conflict 40 3 263 279 doi 10 1177 0010836705055066 S2CID 144380900 Housden Martyn The League of Nations and the Organization of Peace Routledge 2014 Jenne Erin K Nested Security Lessons in Conflict Management from the League of Nations and the European Union Cornell UP 2015 Johnson Gaynor 2013 Lord Robert Cecil Politician and Internationalist ISBN 978 0754669449 Kaiga Sakiko Britain and the Intellectual Origins of the League of Nations 1914 1919 Cambridge University Press 2021 Kahlert Torsten 2019 Pioneers in International Administration A Prosopography of the Directors of the League of Nations Secretariat New Global Studies 13 2 190 227 doi 10 1515 ngs 2018 0039 S2CID 201719554 Knock Thomas J 1995 To End All Wars Woodrow Wilson and the Quest for a New World Order Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00150 0 Kuehl Warren F Dunn Lynne K 1997 Keeping the Covenant American Internationalists and the League of Nations 1920 1939 La Porte Pablo Dissenting Voices The Secretariat of the League of Nations and the Drafting of Mandates 1919 1923 Diplomacy amp Statecraft 32 3 2021 440 463 League of Nations 1935 Essential Facts about the League of Nations Geneva Lloyd Lorna On the side of justice and peace Canada on the League of Nations Council 1927 1930 Diplomacy amp Statecraft 24 2 2013 171 191 Ludi Regula Setting New Standards International Feminism and the League of Nations Inquiry into the Status of Women Journal of Women s History 31 1 2019 12 36 online Archived 24 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine McCarthy Helen The British People and the League of Nations Democracy citizenship and internationalism c 1918 45 Oxford UP 2011 online review Macfadyen David et al eds Eric Drummond and his Legacies The League of Nations and the Beginnings of Global Governance 2019 excerpt McPherson Alan and Yannick Wehrli eds Beyond geopolitics New histories of Latin America at the League of Nations UNM Press 2015 Marbeau Michel 2001 La Societe des Nations in French Presses Universitaires de France ISBN 978 2 13 051635 4 Mulder Nicholas The Economic Weapon The Rise of Sanctions as a Tool of Modern War 2022 excerpt also see online review Olivier Sydney 1918 The League of Nations and primitive peoples 1 ed Oxford University Press Ostrower Gary 1995 The League of Nations from 1919 to 1929 Partners for Peace Avery Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 89529 636 8 Shine Cormac 2018 Papal Diplomacy by Proxy Catholic Internationalism at the League of Nations International Committee on Intellectual Cooperation The Journal of Ecclesiastical History 69 4 785 805 doi 10 1017 S0022046917002731 Swart William J The League of Nations and the Irish Question Sociological Quarterly 36 3 1995 465 481 Thorne Christopher G The limits of foreign policy the West the League and the Far Eastern crisis of 1931 1933 1972 online Tollardo Elisabetta Fascist Italy and the League of Nations 1922 1935 Palgrave Macmillan UK 2016 Tournes Ludovic American membership of the League of Nations US philanthropy and the transformation of an intergovernmental organisation into a think tank International Politics 55 6 2018 852 869 Tworek Heidi J S 2019 Communicable Disease Information Health and Globalization in the Interwar Period The American Historical Review 124 3 813 842 doi 10 1093 ahr rhz577 Wemlinger Cherri Collective Security and the Italo Ethiopian Dispute Before the League of Nations Peace amp Change 40 2 2015 139 166 Wertheim Stephen The League of Nations a retreat from international law Journal of Global History 7 2 2012 210 232 online Archived 14 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Wertheim Stephen The League That Wasn t American Designs for a Legalist Sanctionist League of Nations and the Intellectual Origins of International Organization 1914 1920 Diplomatic History 35 5 2011 797 836 online Archived 16 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine Winkler Henry R Paths Not Taken British Labour amp International Policy in the 1920s 1994 online Yearwood Peter J Guarantee of Peace The League of Nations in British Policy 1914 1925 Oxford UP 2009 Yearwood Peter On the Safe and Right Lines The Lloyd George Government and the Origins of the League of Nations 1916 1918 Historical Journal 32 1 1989 131 155 Yearwood Peter J Consistently with Honour Great Britain the League of Nations and the Corfu Crisis of 1923 Journal of Contemporary History 21 4 1986 559 579 Yearwood Peter J Real securities against new wars Official British thinking and the origins of the League of Nations 1914 19 Diplomacy and Statecraft 9 3 1998 83 109 Yearwood Peter A Genuine and Energetic League of Nations Policy Lord Curzon and the New Diplomacy 1918 1925 Diplomacy amp Statecraft 21 2 2010 159 174 Zimmern Alfred The League of Nations and the Rule of Law 1918 1935 1939 online Related topics Edit Archer Clive 2001 International Organizations Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 24690 3 Baer George W 1976 Test Case Italy Ethiopia and the League of Nations Hoover Institution Press ISBN 978 0 8179 6591 4 Barnett Correlli 1972 The Collapse of British Power Eyre Methuen ISBN 978 0 413 27580 6 Baumslag Naomi 2005 Murderous Medicine Nazi Doctors Human Experimentation and Typhus Praeger ISBN 978 0 275 98312 3 Bell P M H 2007 The Origins of the Second World War in Europe Pearson Education Limited ISBN 978 1 4058 4028 6 Bethell Leslie 1991 The Cambridge History of Latin America Volume VIII 1930 to the Present Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 26652 9 Bouchet Saulnier Francoise Brav Laura Olivier Clementine 2007 The Practical Guide to Humanitarian Law Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7425 5496 2 Churchill Winston 1986 The Second World War Volume I The Gathering Storm Houghton Mifflin Books ISBN 978 0 395 41055 4 Crampton Ben 1996 Atlas of Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 16461 0 Everard Myriam de Haan Francisca 2016 Rosa Manus 1881 1942 The International Life and Legacy of a Jewish Dutch Feminist BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 33318 5 Frowein Jochen A Rudiger Wolfrum 2000 Max Planck Yearbook of United Nations Law Martinus Nijhoff Publishers ISBN 978 90 411 1403 7 Goldblat Jozef 2002 Arms control the new guide to negotiations and agreements SAGE Publications Ltd ISBN 978 0 7619 4016 6 Gorodetsky Gabriel 1994 Soviet Foreign Policy 1917 1991 A Retrospective Routledge ISBN 978 0 7146 4506 3 Haigh R H et al Soviet Foreign Policy the League of Nations and Europe 1917 1939 1986 Henderson Arthur 1918 The League of Nations and labour Oxford University Press Hill Robert Garvey Marcus Universal Negro Improvement Association 1995 The Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 07208 4 Iriye Akira 1987 The Origins of the Second World War in Asia and the Pacific Longman Group UK Limited ISBN 978 0 582 49349 0 Jacobs Aletta Henriette 1996 Feinberg Harriet ed Memories My Life as an International Leader in Health Suffrage and Peace Translated by Annie Wright Feminist Press at City of New York ISBN 978 1 55861 138 2 Kennedy David April 1987 The Move to Institutions Cardozo Law Review 8 5 841 988 Lannon Frances 2002 The Spanish Civil War 1936 1939 Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84176 369 9 Levinovitz Agneta Wallin Ringertz Nils 2001 The Nobel Prize The First 100 Years World Scientific ISBN 978 981 02 4665 5 Levy Marcela Lopez 2001 Bolivia Oxfam Country Profiles Series Oxfam Publishing ISBN 978 0 85598 455 7 Magliveras Konstantinos D 1999 Exclusion from Participation in International Organisations The Law and Practice behind Member States Expulsion and Suspension of Membership Martinus Nijhoff Publishers ISBN 978 90 411 1239 2 Marchand C Roland 2015 The American Peace Movement and Social Reform 1889 1918 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 7025 7 McAllister William B 1999 Drug Diplomacy in the Twentieth Century An International History Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 17990 4 McDonough Frank 1997 The Origins of the First and Second World Wars Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 56861 6 Miers Suzanne 2003 Slavery in the Twentieth Century The Evolution of a Global Problem AltaMira Press ISBN 978 0 7591 0340 5 Meyer Mary K Prugl Elisabeth eds 1999 Gender Politics in Global Governance Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8476 9161 6 Mulder Nicholas The Economic Weapon The Rise of Sanctions as a Tool of Modern War 2022 excerpt Nish Ian 1977 Japanese foreign policy 1869 1942 Kasumigaseki to Miyakezaka Routledge amp Kegan Paul ISBN 978 0 415 27375 6 Osmanczyk Edmund Jan Mango Anthony 2002 Encyclopedia of the United Nations and International Agreements Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 93924 9 Pietila Hilkka 31 March 1999 Engendering the Global Agenda A Success Story of Women and the United Nations PDF European Consortium for Political Research Workshop University of Mannheim Archived from the original PDF on 13 May 2017 Retrieved 31 August 2017 Rapoport Anatol 1995 The Origins of Violence Approaches to the Study of Conflict Transaction Publishers ISBN 978 1 56000 783 8 Reichard Martin 2006 The EU NATO relationship a legal and political perspective Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 0 7546 4759 1 Scheina Robert L 2003 Latin America s Wars Volume 2 The Age of the Professional Soldier 1900 2001 Potomac Books Inc ISBN 978 1 57488 452 4 Skirbekk Gunnar Gilje Nils 2001 History of Western Thought From Ancient Greece to the Twentieth Century Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 22073 6 Torpey John 2000 The Invention of the Passport Surveillance Citizenship and the State Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 63493 9 Tripp Charles 2002 A History of Iraq Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 52900 6 Wiltsher Anne 1985 Most Dangerous Women Feminist peace campaigners of the Great War 1st ed Pandora Press ISBN 978 0 86358 010 9 Historiography Edit Aufricht Hans Guide to League of Nations Publications 1951 Gram Skjoldager Karen and Haakon A Ikonomou Making Sense of the League of Nations Secretariat Historiographical and Conceptual Reflections on Early International Public Administration European History Quarterly 49 3 2019 420 444 Jackson Simon From Beirut to Berlin via Geneva The New International History Middle East Studies and the League of Nations Contemporary European History 27 4 2018 708 726 online Juntke Fritz Sveistrup Hans Das deutsche Schrifttum uber den Volkerbund 1927 Pedersen Susan Back to the League of Nations American Historical Review 112 4 2007 1091 1117 JSTOR 40008445 Albert Pollard 1918 The League of Nations in history 1st ed London Oxford University Press Wikidata Q105626947External links Edit Wikisource has several original texts related to League of Nations Wikimedia Commons has media related to League of Nations Wikiquote has quotations related to League of Nations The Covenant of the League of Nations Avalon Project Documents in Law History and Diplomacy History of the League of Nations Archived 3 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine University of Oxford led project League of Nations Photo archive Archived 3 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine League of Nations chronology League of Nations timeline worldatwar net Wilson s Final Address in Support of the League of Nations Speech made 25 September 1919 History 1919 1946 Archived 7 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine from the United Nations Office at Geneva League of Nations Archives from the United Nations Office at Geneva Table of Assemblies Archived 16 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine Dates of each annual assembly links to list of members of each country s delegation Total Digital Access to the League of Nations Archives Project Archived 20 May 2020 at the Wayback Machine LONSEA League of Nations Search Engine Cluster of Excellence Asia and Europe in a Global Context Universitat Heidelberg Archived 7 January 2020 at the Wayback Machine The League of Nations Boston Old Colony Trust Company 1919 A collection of charters speeches etc on the topic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title League of Nations amp oldid 1147617245, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.