UNdemocracy.com
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Media: Newspaper article 13 March, 4 minute video presentation, Podcast interview.
Some recent blogging is also available.

This website gives easy access to the transcripts (since 1994) of two of the five principal United Nations bodies.

The Security Council can authorize war and international sanctions.

The General Assembly directs the business of the United Nations and recommends international treaties.

Find out what your nation has been doing in this international forum.

A proud member of the Parliamentary Informatics web-ring

The third column lists wikipedia articles on which incoming links have been clicked. This is the best way to begin exploring this resource, if you do not know what is available. One in a hundred documents are very interesting to a new visitor, so if you pick them at random you are unlikely to get lucky. For further information, see about us.

Security Council

Meetings by topic

All documents

Recent meetings

Wikipedia referring articles

All incoming citations

(Portal:United Nations)

Recently followed citations

Information

This site has nothing to do with the real UN website or any part of the United Nations itself. It has been supported by no organization. It is merely a citizens' attempt to provide Web 2.0 compliant access to many of the important official UN documents (eg Security Council Resolutions and General Assembly votes) which feature in the news.

For background information about the UN and its structure, as well as the meaning and purpose of these documents, check out United Nations on Wikipedia and read the related articles. Why not help to improve them?

For a quick tour of the sets of documents that are available here, look at President Bush of The United States, or President Ahmadinejad of Iran, as well as all speeches that refer to Resolution 242.

Questions about this website in particular are answered by: Who? What? When? Where? Why? How?, and finally What can I do to help?.

You can leave comments on some of those links, or email team@undemocracy.com. Don't be shy. This project is a hobby begun by volunteers who recognized that the accessibility of these vital documents was so limited they had to do something about it themselves, since there was no evidence it was going to happen by itself.

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