Promoting Peace and Burdensharing
The UN currently maintains the world’s second-largest standing army, operating 15 peacekeeping missions and three political missions in some of the world’s most hostile environments. Through UN peacekeeping operations, the international community shares the burden of fostering peace and stability, so no nation has to take every risk or bear every cost. A wide variety of academic and expert analyses have found these missions to be remarkably efficient and effective, and laud the United Nations for its leadership in significantly reducing civil strife worldwide since the end of the Cold War.

Building Democracy in Afghanistan
Since December 2003, the UN has assisted in registering over 10 million Afghan citizens to vote, 41% of whom are women. More than 8,000 election observers, polling agents, international observers, and media observers were trained by the UN to monitor the September 2005 provincial elections and the October 2005 elections to ensure they were conducted freely and fairly.

Responding to Natural Disasters
Every year, UN agencies raise more than $2 billion to help respond to devastating natural and humanitarian disasters. Working in conjunction with NGOs and other major aid organizations, the UN leads global efforts to provide rapid and essential life-saving assistance in the aftermath of disasters. Within 24 hours of the Asian tsunami in December 2004, the UN was on the ground providing food for 1.7 million people, shelter to 1.3 million people, water to more than 1 million people, and vaccinations for 1.2 million children.

Fighting Poverty
At the 2000 United Nations Millemmium Summit, 189 heads of state and government from the North and South signed onto the Millennium Declaration, an ambitious and concrete plan for improving the quality of life in developing countries. This Declaration developed into the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and represented the first internationally agreed upon framework for fighting poverty, hunger, disease, and inequality. The MDGs, which ambitiously motivate Member States to fight these problems at their roots, are targeted for achievement by 2015.

Promoting Justice
UN war crimes tribunals have developed an international legal framework that enables prosecution of individuals involved in genocide and gross violations of human rights. These tribunals have put perpetrators of atrocities in Rwanda and Yugoslavia behind bars. Most recently, former Liberian President Charles Taylor was turned over to the UN Special Court in Sierra Leone on 17 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity for allegedly supporting rebels during the Sierra Leone conflict.

Protecting Human Rights
In 1948, the UN General Assembly passed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the world’s gold standard for the basic rights that all human beings should enjoy. In subsequent years, the UN has led global efforts to forge consensus on international human rights norms and helped broker dozens of comprehensive agreements on political, civil, economic, and social rights. UN human rights capabilities help stop abuses and provide refuge to the oppressed.

Establishing International Standards
The UN has been responsible for negotiating internationally accepted technical standards in areas like statistics, trade law, customs procedures, intellectual property, aviation, shipping, and telecommunications, which have facilitated cross-national transactions and stimulated business activity throughout the world.

Promoting Free Elections in Iraq
The UN has played an integral role in the organization and execution of free and democratic elections in Iraq. For example, UN experts provided the Iraqi-administered Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq (IECI) with the expertise, skills, and manpower necessary to conduct three successful national elections, which have helped enable the transition of full sovereignty to the Iraqi people. The UN has also assisted Iraqi leaders in developing a Constitution that lays the foundation for a government of national unity.

Fighting for Women’s Rights
The UN General Assembly adopted the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination against Women in 1979, which was subsequently ratified by 180 countries, providing a basis for greater recognition of women’s rights throughout the world. Working to improve the quality of life for women around the globe, the UN Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) has sponsored projects in over 100 countries addressing violence against women, women’s health, and women’s economic security.

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