Abstract
IN an important passage in his broadcast some weeks ago, the Prime Minister expressed the hope that we would not lightly cast aside all the immense work which was accomplished by the League of Nations, and said that we must take as our foundation in restoring the true greatness of Europe the lofty conception of freedom, law and morality which was the spirit of the League. In this he was following up remarks by Mr. Eden and Mr. Herbert Morrison, who in earlier speeches had urged the necessity of making full use of existing machinery for international co-operation, both that established to further the war effort, such as the Combined Raw Materials Board, and those institutions such as the League of Nations and the International Labour Organisation, which had already proved their worth in certain technical and non-political fields before the War. The importance of collaboration between various nations is emphasized further by the draft plan just issued by the Government of the United States, after discussions with the Governments of Great Britain, the Dominions, the U.S.S.R. and China, for the organization of a United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, for the delivery of food, clothing, and medical supplies to the peoples of Axis-occupied countries as they are liberated.
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ASPECTS OF INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION. Nature 151, 679–682 (1943). https://doi.org/10.1038/151679a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/151679a0