Television news suggests that violence and warfare are the dominant features of contemporary society. History can convince us that it has ever been so, and many theorist of international relations argue that nothing is likely to change. Yet Roy Weatherford argues that we are on the verge of a profound change in social relations - the end of the sovereignty of nation-states and the warfare between them, and the beginning of the rule of democratically established, collectively enforced international law. He proposes that national sovereignty and jingoistic provincialism must yield to a world culture, speaking a world language, subject to a world government and living as a world family. For too long world peace has seemed a noble but unattainable ideal. Weatherford aims to demonstrate that it is now both economically and politically possible and is therefore our moral duty.
World Peace and the Human Family