Book Cover
E-book
Author Albright, Madeleine, author

Title Threats to Democracy : Prevention and Response, Independent Task Force Report
Published New York : Council on Foreign Relations, Aug. 2003

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Description 1 online resource
Contents Contents -- foreword -- acknowledgments -- executive summary -- task force members -- task force report -- additional and dissenting views -- appendixes -- appendix a universal declaration of human rights -- appendix b international covenant on civil and political rights -- appendix c toward a community of democracies ministerial conference -- appendix d resolution adopted by the general assembly -- appendix e promotion of the right to democracy commission on human rights resolution 1999/57
Appendix f promoting and consolidating democracy commission on human rights resolution 2000/47appendix g oas ag/res.1080 (xxi-o/91) representative democracy -- appendix h oas inter-american democratic charter
Summary Annotation The work of the international community of democratic states does not end when a country's people choose democracy. Rather, democratic governments must endeavor also to help one another to nurture and maintain their democracies. In particular, governments must work to secure more effective international action against coups d'etat and erosions of democracy, which continue to plague countries on the democratic path. UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan expressed this best when he stated, "Wherever democracy has taken root, it will not be reversed." This report -- the work of an Independent Task Force composed of leading civil society, academic, and former government figures from Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, Latin America, and the Middle East -- develops a framework for the coordination of international community action against such threats to democracy. It recommends preventive and responsive measures that will enable the international community of democratic states to act quickly and collectively. The Task Force argues that helping countries maintain and consolidate democratic gains is consistent not only with the values but also with the security interests of the world's democracies. Democratic states are less likely to breed terrorists or to be state sponsors of terrorism They are less likely to go to war with one another and are more likely to be active participants in the global economy. The report concludes that ultimately the international community can encourage democracy to take root and flourish only by showing the citizens of nondemocratic countries that democracy is both beneficial and sustainable over the long term. The recommendations in this report provide one important setof tools for doing so
Subject Democracy -- International cooperation
Intervention (International law)
Security, International.
Coups d'état.
Coups d'état
Democracy -- International cooperation
Intervention (International law)
Security, International
Form Electronic book
Author Geremek, Bronislaw, author
Halperin, Morton H., author
ISBN 087609325X
9780876093252