“A Preface to World Government: A Comparison of the Current State of International Governance with the State of Governance that Followed Adoption of the American Articles of Confederation.”

Connecticut Law Review 27:1-37 (2011)
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Abstract

Is the current state of international governance by the United Nations and related organizations a preface to what eventually might become a world government? Is it at all similar to what was the structure of government in the United States after the adoption of the Articles of Confederation in 1781 and before adoption of the Constitution of 1787? Are changes in the way international institutions like the United Nations operate related to changes in our conceptions of the role of these institutions in providing international governance? When governmental institutions prove to be too weak to adequately perform the tasks expected of them is there a natural evolution toward greater centralization of power? If so, might an early sign of this evolution be decisions by public officials that afford greater deference to the decrees of international institutions that previously might have been sidestepped?

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Vincent Samar
Loyola University, Chicago

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