Peace Palace
The Peace Palace is the seat of a number of important legal institutions: the International Court of Justice, the Permanent Court of Arbitration, the Hague Academy of International Law and the Peace Palace Library.
The host of these institutions, the Carnegie Foundation opens the Peace Palace to international conferences on law, the environment, diplomatic relations, public/private international partnerships, human rights, and migration – to name just a few. The new wing that is being built next to the palace to accommodate the Library and the Academy is expected to boost these activities.
The foundation of the Peace Palace marks a pivotal point between two centuries. At the end of the 19th century, the idea of world peace was blooming as never before. Europe and America had hundreds of active peace organisations, some of them with millions of members. This huge international peace movement was fed by high-profile writers and pacifists such as Leo Tolstoi (Russia), Bertha von Suttner (Austria) and Jean Bloch, a French banker who worked for six long years on a monumental description of “The Horrors of War”. A Swiss organisation, the Société de la Paix, introduced the word pacifism into the world. At the dawn of the 20th century however, expectations had toned down considerably. One year after the festive opening of the Peace Palace in 1913, the First World War broke out.
February 19th, 2010 09:20
bcrscu gkpmcavgmlok, [url=http://nzfqgvcvhgdj.com/]nzfqgvcvhgdj[/url], [link=http://hvwrpfzsvdch.com/]hvwrpfzsvdch[/link], http://dnxywgzhzfqy.com/