17–20 Jun 2025
Europe/London timezone

GLOBAL PEACE FOR A BOOMING WORLD ECONOMY

18 Jun 2025, 16:45

Description

The restoration of the world was imperative to re-establish international administration and global governance after its destruction by WWII. The Marshall Plan and the creation of the United Nations were therefore important. Studies confirm that several European states' economies were rehabilitated by the US sponsored program, in the aftermath of WWII. Theorists, researchers, thinkers, teachers, educators and others were all concerned with the issue of conflict and conflict resolutions and how to come to better solutions in order to avoid eventual world conflicts. All efforts made to achieve the goal were rendered possible in order to benefit from a relatively peaceful world in comparison to WWII. In spite of war atrocities, international administration and global governance and the common sense of humanity conflicts still burst out. Nowadays, the context of the Russo-Ukrainian conflict involving many European forces tends to revert back to WWII. It seems today useful rethinking Immanual Kant's Perpetual Peace or the Democratic Peace Theory. World political leaders have to promote peace and tolerance on the global scale in this contemporary era. As a result of the research, the planetary population will experience less wars when the first article of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) is respected and implemented in its pure form. The research is conducted through deductive reasoning. Primary and secondary sources of information in forms of academic articles and books, newspapers, interviews, official documents and others. These sources are in English, French and swedish. The research is both quantitative and qualitative, and encloses a theoretical perspective section. The Democratic Peace theory is detailed in order to confirm or reject the hypothesis once the study of the empirical facts is completed. The limits of the research is related to the title of the project, meaning from WWII (1939-1945) to the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war (2024).

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