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Turkey's New Vision for "man's Best Hope for Peace": United Nations Reform and Reorganization of the Security Council

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Date

2014

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Center Foreign Policy & Peace Research

Open Access Color

BRONZE

Green Open Access

No

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Publicly Funded

No
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Average
Influence
Average
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Average

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Abstract

Despite its present reputation as weak, inefficient, and discreditable, the United Nations is one of humanity's most noble endeavors. Although the structure of the Security Council prevents its decision-making procedures from being more democratic, the UN still seeks to suppress aggression, respect self-determination, and promote human rights and well-being. Furthermore, political cosmopolitans' proposals for comprehensive UN reform, which goes far beyond increasing the number of permanent members of the Security Council, give us hope for substantial improvement. Nevertheless, the UN is still the sum of the states it is comprised of and UN reform depends on the broader and ambitious project of state reform as both concept and practice. Within this context, this paper argues that focusing exclusively on the Security Council and the geographical distribution of permanent membership only harms the comprehensiveness of the analyses seeking to reform the UN from a larger perspective. The fact that the success of a UN reform is closely related with the enhancement of member states' ethical capacities should also be taken into consideration. The next round of debates for a proper solution to the UN impasse takes place in 2015, and Turkey is emerging as an enthusiastic voice for further reform and for its own potential permanent membership in the Security Council. However, Turkey has also developed a significantly anti-UN discourse unprecedented in its foreign policy, which now runs the risk of curtailing the country's capacity to partake in substantial change in UN decision-making procedures. Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu currently acts as a statesman, insisting on a statist reform (which focuses more on states' individual interests) of the Security Council. Interestingly, in the 1990s, when Davutoglu was a university professor, his views of the UN tended to be more cosmopolitan and suggested a civilization-based solution. This paper, while elaborating on the discussions of reforming the UN from a cosmopolitan perspective, also probes Davutoglu's conflicting approaches to the issue. It thus seeks to argue that Turkey, instead of pushing for a purely statist model, should consider supporting pluralistic, multi-level, and more-complex participation in the UN's decision-making procedures.

Description

Keywords

United Nations Reform, Security Council, Turkish Foreign Policy, Ahmet Davutoglu, United Nations Reform;Security Council;Turkish Foreign Policy;Ahmet Davutoğlu

Fields of Science

05 social sciences, 0506 political science

Citation

WoS Q

Q3

Scopus Q

Q2
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OpenCitations Citation Count
N/A

Source

All Azimuth

Volume

3

Issue

1

Start Page

5

End Page

18
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Scopus : 3

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Mendeley Readers : 6

SCOPUS™ Citations

3

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Web of Science™ Citations

2

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1.9918

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