No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 May 2009
Annual Report of the Secretary-General:In his introduction to the eighth annual report of the Secretary-General on the work of the United Nations, which covered the period of July 1, 1952-June 30, 1953, Dag Hammarskjold urged Member governments to take a long-range vantage-point in judging the success and maturity of the organization. The United Nations, he pointed out, was “a positive response by the world community to the fundamental needs of our time” and, while efforts to control and moderate conflicts offering an immediate danger to world peace (especially the “East-West” conflict) of necessity occupied the first attention of Members in their day-to-day decisions, the ultimate success of the organization would be determined by its contribution to furthering basic trends in current human society. Mr. Hammarskjold felt that, side-by-side with the immediate issues, lay the fundamental trends toward wider social justice and equality for the individual and toward wider political, economic and social equality and justice between nations. Previous efforts for world peace were directed toward objectives which had received even fuller recognition in the United Nations: 1) an international instrument for peace and justice based on a system of mediation, conciliation and collective security; 2) orderly progress of nations toward a state of full economic development, self-government and independence; and 3) recognition of international cooperation as an essential instrument for development toward greater social justice within nations. The Secretary-General observed a tendency among Members to regard political and economic equality as technical and special problems subordinate to the more urgent one of collective security. In a shortterm perspective, he added, this was probably true; however, international equality and justice were prerequisite to domestic social development of all the peoples of the world and were decisive factors in building a world of peace and freedom.
1 General Assembly, Official Records (8th session), Supplement No. 1. Mr. Hammarskjold noted that he had held the position of Secretary-General for only two and one-half months of the period reviewed; prior to his appointment, Mr. Lie had occupied the office.
2 Other chapters covered political and security questions, economic and social developments, questions concerning trusteeship and non-self-governing territories, legal questions and administrative and budgetary questions. In each case, the information in the chapter comprised the activities of the various United Nations organs in these fields during the period reviewed. Since that information has already been summarized in these volumes, it will not be summarized here.