Front cover image for A world made new : Eleanor Roosevelt and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights

A world made new : Eleanor Roosevelt and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights

"This is the story of Eleanor Roosevelt's proudest achievement, one that both she and generations of historians came to see as her greatest contribution to world history." "One of FDR's most cherished dreams as the war drew to a close was that all of the nations dragged into this conflagration would come together to form an international organization whose purpose would be to ensure that such a war would never happen again. The president died a few months before the opening of the United Nations in London, and, to the great chagrin of the American delegation, Eleanor Roosevelt went in his place. She performed so well that she was asked to head one of the UN's most sensitive commissions. Her assignment was to hammer out the world's first international bill of rights, a document that would enshrine Roosevelt's four freedoms and define the rights that every man and woman in every country around the world should enjoy. That document, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, was the founding document of the modern rights movement."--Jacket
eBook, English, ©2001
Random House, New York, ©2001
History
1 online resource (xxi, 333 pages) : illustrations
9780375506925, 0375506926
1417371820
Includes index
Electronic reproduction, [Place of publication not identified], HathiTrust Digital Library, 2024