Publications /
Opinion

Back
​​​​​​​The United Nations and Social Justice: A Noble Mission, A Flawed System
Authors
February 20, 2025

The United Nations was built on a promise: to create a world in which justice, equality, and human dignity prevail. Arising from the ashes of the Second World War, the UN’s charter is filled with lofty ideals—social progress, human rights, and “better standards of life in larger freedom.” Decades later, the rhetoric remains intact, but the reality tells a different story.

The UN has played a critical role in shaping global conversations around poverty, human rights, and inequality, but the question remains: is it truly delivering on social justice, or has it morphed into a bureaucratic machine that manages rather than challenges global inequities?

An Institution Built to Persuade, Not Enforce

The UN is, in many ways, the world’s conscience. It is a single platform that brings governments, civil society, and international institutions together, crafting global norms on everything from labor protections to human rights. Over the years, it has been the architect of sweeping declarations—the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), and most recently, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

But declarations do not create justice. The UN lacks enforcement power. It can investigate, document, and denounce abuses, but it cannot force compliance. Governments sign human-rights treaties while continuing to suppress dissent. They pledge to tackle inequality while entrenching policies that widen the gap between rich and poor. Ultimately, the UN’s influence depends on voluntary commitments from its member states—commitments that, too often, go unfulfilled.

The SDGs: Grand Ambitions, Limited Power

The Sustainable Development Goals, adopted in 2015, were meant to be a blueprint for a fairer world. Seventeen targets—from ending hunger to reducing inequality—mapped out an ambitious global agenda.

Yet, as the 2030 deadline for achievement of the SDGs approaches, progress is alarmingly slow. The COVID-19 pandemic, economic shocks, and geopolitical instability have derailed many goals. But the deeper issue is structural. The UN lacks the financial and political muscle to drive real change. It does not control development funding; it relies on donors, whose priorities shift with political cycles. The financing gap for achieving the SDGs stands at a staggering $4 trillion a year, with little sign of being filled.

More fundamentally, the SDGs are based on a flawed assumption: that governments and the private sector will prioritize social justice if given the right framework. But, in a world in which wealth is increasingly concentrated and corporate power is unchecked, voluntary pledges are not enough.

Selective Justice and Political Blind Spots

Nowhere is the UN’s credibility more tested than in the realm of human rights. The UN Human Rights Council investigates violations, issues reports, and offers technical assistance to states. The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) provides protection for millions of displaced people. The International Labour Organization (ILO) sets standards for workers’ rights.

Yet, justice at the UN is often selective. The Human Rights Council includes countries with appalling human rights records. Major powers escape serious scrutiny, while smaller or geopolitically weaker nations bear the brunt of condemnation. The UN’s handling of conflicts—from Gaza to Ukraine to Myanmar—has been riddled with double standards, damaging its credibility as a neutral arbiter of justice.

Even in areas in which the UN has made strides—gender equality, access to education, health—progress is often uneven. It is easier to champion causes that do not challenge entrenched power structures. But when justice requires corporate tax avoidance to be confronted, monopolies to be broken up, or reparations for historical injustices to be demanded, the UN is conspicuously silent.

A Global System Rigged Against Change

The UN’s limitations are not just about political will—they are built into the structure of global governance itself. Power at the UN is distributed unevenly, mirroring the economic and political hierarchies of the world order.

The Security Council, dominated by five permanent members with veto power, remains a relic of the post-Second World War balance of power. Reforming it is a near-impossible task, blocked by those that benefit most from the status quo.

Economic justice is another glaring gap. While the General Assembly passes resolutions calling for debt relief, fairer trade policies, and more equitable development finance, real power lies elsewhere. The International Monetary Fund, World Bank, and World Trade Organization—institutions that shape the economic realities for billions of people—operate under governance structures in which wealthier nations hold disproportionate sway.

The result is a system that administers global inequality rather than dismantling it.

Can the UN Still Be a Force for Social Justice?

For all its shortcomings, the UN remains the only institution with a truly global social mandate. It has the capacity to set norms, mobilize resources, and amplify the voices of marginalized communities. The alternative—no UN at all—would likely mean an even more fragmented and unequal world.

But if it is to be more than a caretaker of the status quo, the UN must push for deeper structural reforms:

- Challenge global financial injustice: Advocate not just for aid, but for systemic changes—debt restructuring, fair taxation, and an end to illicit capital flows.

- Hold all states accountable: End the practice of selective human-rights enforcement. Justice cannot be contingent on political alliances.

- Reform global governance: Shift power in decision-making bodies to reflect the realities of a multipolar world, rather than maintaining a system built in 1945.

- Move beyond voluntary commitments: Develop enforcement mechanisms that ensure social justice goals are more than aspirations.

The Limits of Idealism in a Power-Driven World

Social justice, from a realist perspective, is not achieved through moral appeals or institutional resolutions but through power dynamics. Without the ability to compel compliance, the UN remains an instrument through which states and corporations negotiate their interests, rather than a true arbiter of global justice.

The UN’s greatest challenge is not its lack of ambition but the constraints imposed by the very system it operates within. It can convene summits, issue reports, and raise awareness, but unless it can challenge power—both political and economic—it risks remaining a well-meaning custodian of the status quo.

The world does not need a UN that merely manages inequality. It needs one that is empowered to reshape it. But in the current international order, such a transformation remains a distant prospect.

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    June 12, 2020
    She is just seventeen. An African-American high-school student. If Darnella Frazier had not turned on her cellphone on May 25, when she witnessed four police officers arresting a black man in Minneapolis, the world would never have known how George Floyd died that day, or why. A convenience store employee had called the police, accusing Mr Floyd of buying cigarettes with a fake $20 bill. Possibly Mr Floyd resisted arrest, which did not result in a “medical incident” as the police in ...
  • Authors
    نزار الفراوي
    June 11, 2020
    شكلت جائحة كوفيد 19 تحديا غير مسبوق بالنسبة للإعلام المغربي بمختلف منابره المكتوبة والمسموعة والمرئية والإلكترونية. كان السؤال يطرح إشكالية تنشيط آليات إعلام أزمات في بلد لم يشهد الجيل الصحافي الممارس به أزمة سابقة تكرس تقليدا وتشحذ مهارات وتبني ذاكرة خبرة للتعاطي مع حالة استعجالية من هذا الحجم، ومن هذا النوع. أياما قبل تسجيل الحالة الوافدة الأولى للفيروس، كان المغاربة يتناقلون أخبار الوباء من القنوات الفضائية العالمية بشكل أقرب إلى أعاجيب تحدث في بلاد بعيدة، إلى أن حل الوباء بالبل ...
  • Authors
    June 11, 2020
    When the cruise ship the MS Braemar in March had coronavirus cases confirmed on board, it struggled to find somewhere to dock. The Americans turned it away, as did the Bahamas. But another nation, just 200 miles off the U.S. coast, accepted the desperate Braemar. Cuba allowed it to berth in Puerto Mariel, 40 kilometers west of the capital, Havana. Within a day, in cooperation with the British government, Cuban medical teams accompanied more than 680 passengers to Havana airport and ...
  • June 10, 2020
    Ce travail vient explorer une nouvelle piste qui pourrait contribuer à une levée de confinement efficace. Il s’agit d’un phénomène que l’on appelle « effet coupe du monde ». Nous définissons, d’abord, ce phénomène, montrons son existence et son éventuel effet amplificateur au regard de la progression de la pandémie, en termes du nombre de cas infectés au pic et la durée encourue avant son atteinte. Partant de scénarios hypothétiques, en ce qui concerne les conditions initiales à la ...
  • Authors
    June 10, 2020
    Three features of the post-pandemic global economy can already be anticipated: the worldwide rise in public and private debt levels, accelerated digitization, and a partial reversal of globalization. The first arises from the public sector's role as the ultimate insurer against catastrophes, government policies to smooth pandemic curves and the coronavirus recession. These will leave a legacy of massive public-sector debt worldwide (as discussed in a previous post. Lower tax revenue ...
  • June 10, 2020
    We explore a new avenue that could contribute to an effective de-confinement in the context of COVID-19. This phenomenon is known as the ‘World Cup Effect’. We first define this phenomenon and highlight its existence and its possible amplifying effect with regard to the spread of the pandemic, in light of the number of infected cases recorded at the pandemic’s peak, and the duration before reaching its highest level. Based on hypothetical scenarios in terms of the initial conditions ...
  • June 9, 2020
    المسيرة: إيمان لهريش، مسؤولة عن البرامج بمركز السياسات من أجل الجنوب الجديد المتدخلون: كريمة مكيكة، عضو المجلس الاقتصادي والاجتماعي والبيئي يوسف ڭراوي فيلالي، رئيس المركز المغربي للحكامة والتسيير ثريا بنلفقيه، مؤسسة ومديرة تنفيذية ل EMPEOPLE ...
  • Authors
    Souha Majidi
    June 5, 2020
    Face à l’ampleur des retombées économiques et sociales des crises sanitaires, comme la Covid19, l’aide publique au développement peut jouer un rôle essentiel dans l’atténuation de l’impact des épidémies sur les économies les plus fragiles et vulnérables. L'aide publique au développement (APD) vise non seulement à combler le manque de capital nécessaire à amorcer une dynamique forte de développement, mais aussi à amorcer la capacité des Etats à répondre aux risques sanitaires et sécu ...
  • June 5, 2020
    La pandémie Covid-19, par sa violence et sa soudaineté, a plongé le monde dans un état de stupeur, de sidération. Et c’est précisément ce terme, sidération, qui reviendra en boucle dès qu’il s’agira d’analyser les sentiments individuels et/ou collectifs face au traumatisme produit par la déferlante sur le monde du nouveau Coronavirus. Comment définir ce traumatisme planétaire ? Pour les dictionnaires de langue française (Robert et Larousse), la sidération correspond à « un anéanti ...
  • June 5, 2020
    الهلع (la sidération) كانت من أكثر الكلمات المستعملة من طرف المعلقين في حديثهم عن المشاعر الفردية والجماعية التي رافقت حياة البشر خلال مرحلة تفشي وباء كوفيد 19. بالنسبة للقاموس الفرنسي (Le Robert et Larousse) تتطابق كلمة سيديراسيون مع "انقراض مفاجئ للوظائف الحيوية الشيء الذي يؤدي الى وضعية موت ظاهرية تحت تأثير صدمة عنيفة". هكذا تتساكب على الإنسان الهلوع "التأثيرات الفتاكة للكواكب"، فيصبح مخدرا مشدوها و مذهولا. كما أن استعمال هذه الكلمة بالانجليزية يؤدي الى مفهوم الضائقة و الانقراض ...