• Book Club Special Mondial Session

    Mondial, published semi-annually, invites thought leaders to provide insights into our most pressing global challenges. The Journal primarily focuses on world federation, disarmament and peace, human rights, United Nations Reform, strengthening international institutions and world law, and the environment. Drawing its name from the French word meaning “of or involving the whole world,” Mondial serves […]

  • An Intergenerational Panel: Directly Confronting Gender-specific Violence and Promoting Justice and Peace / NGO CSW69 Forum

    Join us on March 14 at 10:30 AM EDT for a virtual intergenerational panel sponsored by Citizens for Global Solutions, Trinity Washington University, and the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur. The panel will explore violence against women and girls and barriers to justice in DR Congo and Nigeria and contemplate how the Beijing Declaration […]

  • Book Club Session 1 | World Parliament: Governance and Democracy in the 21st Century

    When: Saturday, March 29, 2025 Time: 12:00 -1:30 pm Eastern Time Where: Zoom | Cost: FREE and open to the public Register We will be discussing Chapter 27, "Outlines of a New World Organization," of World Parliament: Governance and Democracy in the 21st Century (2nd edition) by Andreas Bummel and Jo Leinen. Chapter 5, "The Second […]

  • Book Club Session 2 | World Parliament: Governance and Democracy in the 21st Century

    When: Saturday, April 12, 2025 Time: 12:00 -1:30 pm EDT Where: Zoom | Cost: FREE and open to the public Register We will be discussing chapters 28 and 29. About the Book World Parliament: Governance and Democracy in the 21st Century (2nd edition) by Andreas Bummel and Jo Leinen For the first time in history, all […]

  • Federalism, Faith, and the Israel-Palestine Conflict

    The stagnation of the Peace Process in Israel-Palestine and the evolution of a very problematic “One-state” reality on the ground are making the search for a new alternative the most interesting development of the last decade in civil society and academic circles. In 2020, Challenge launched a new program named the “Federal Forum,” in which […]

  • Book Club Session 1 | The Future in the Past: Reconstructing Article 109(3) of the UN Charter Towards The San Francisco Promise to Constitutionalise the United Nations and International Law

    When: Saturday, September 6, 2025 Time: 12:00 - 1:30 pm EDT Where: Zoom | Cost: FREE and open to the public Register for the Event About the Book A forgotten clause in the UN Charter, the “San Francisco Promise,” offers a way forward to reform the United Nations from its current democratic deficit of the Security […]

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  • Book Club Session 2 | The Future in the Past: Reconstructing Article 109(3) of the UN Charter Towards The San Francisco Promise to Constitutionalise the United Nations and International Law

    A forgotten clause in the UN Charter, the “San Francisco Promise,” offers a way forward to reform the United Nations from its current democratic deficit of the Security Council and its veto power. As a compromise, the permanent five members of the UN Security Council agreed to a clause that allowed for Charter Review, ten years after the UN came into force. This “San Francisco Promise” was activated in 1955, but was later breached and abandoned. The review conference endowed in the Charter, and legally still valid, could pave the way for a process of writing a constitution for the UN, allowing it to reinvent itself to better face current and future global challenges. Thus help transform the UN into a global governance fulfilling the objectives set out in the UN Charter’s preamble.

  • Book Club Session 3 | The Future in the Past

    Join us to explore the “San Francisco Promise,” a forgotten clause in the UN Charter that offers a path to reform the UN and address the Security Council’s democratic deficit and veto power.

  • Book Club Session 4 | The Future in the Past

    Join us to explore the “San Francisco Promise,” a forgotten clause in the UN Charter that offers a path to reform the UN and address the Security Council’s democratic deficit and veto power.