On 1 January, 1942, a document was signed by 26 states, coining the term "United Nations". The Declaration of the United Nations exteal link pledged that their govements would continue fighting together against the Axis Powers. Swiss Public Television, RTS, takes a closer look at attempts to make historic documents like these available to a wider public. (RTS/swissinfo.ch)
The Geneva archives are testament to efforts to establish peace through diplomacy. The League of Nations was the predecessor of the United Nations, and was the first inteational organisation that set out to achieve world peace. The 26 years of the League's history are summed up in 15 million pages.
These documents will soon be available on the Inteet, thanks partly to students at the University of Geneva. They are busy deciphering and indexing the documents with the help of thousands of Inteet users via an online research platform. The project is part of a crowdsourcing project and it's like a social media site for researchers.
The efforts of the League of Nations did not remove the major obstacles to peace which occurred in the early ‘30s, and it was powerless in the face of the Second World War. But it did embed the concept of inteational cooperation in people's minds.
Neuer Inhalt
Horizontal Line
subscription form
Form for signing up for free newsletter.
Sign up for our free newsletters and get the top stories delivered to your inbox.
swissinfo EN
The following content is sourced from exteal partners. We cannot guarantee that it is suitable for the visually or hearing impaired.
Join us on Facebook!
SWI swissinfo...
ما را در سایت SWI swissinfo دنبال میکنید
برچسب:
نویسنده: کاوه محمدزادگان
بازدید: 290
تاريخ: پنجشنبه
14 دی
1396 ساعت: 1:42