Free Term Papers on Emergency Sex

OPPapers.com Essay Index >> Book Reports >> Emergency Sex

We have many free term papers and essays on Emergency Sex. We also have a wide variety of research papers and book reports available to you for free. You can browse our collection of term papers or use our search engine.

Essays from FratFiles.com
  1. Emergency Sex

    Emergency Sex. The statement “the more acute the situation and by extension
    the greater the need, the less useful the United Nations ...

  2. Emergency Contraception

    Emergency Contraception. Emergency Contraception The Emergency Contraception is
    a birth control pill that prevents pregnancy after having sex. ...

  3. Plan B-The Emergency Prevention

    ... that teens are not more likely to engage in unprotected sex than young adults are,
    when both have advance access to Plan B” (“Emergency Contraception”). ...

  4. A Bill To Ban Emergency Contraceptives In The United States Of ...

    ... of this bill such as antiabortion and abstinence advocates say they fear that use
    of any such emergency contraceptive “will lead to rampant sex among tweens ...

  5. Sex Offenders

    ... Chemical castration is an ideal punishment for sex offenders ... The only problem with
    E-911 is the emergency service that is dispatched may not have E-911 tracking ...

View More Papers...

Emergency Sex

Submitted by bhami636 on March 6, 2008

Category: Book Reports
Words: 1362 | Pages: 6
Views: 86
Popularity Rank: 91,742
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

The statement “the more acute the situation and by extension the greater the need, the less useful the United Nations is and the more irrelevant international law becomes”, was once observed by a critic while talking about the United Nations. This essay will examine this question by drawing upon the book Emergency Sex and Other Desperate Measures, as well as look at some of the efforts of Rafael Lempkin. The above quote, in my own opinion, is stating that the more desperate a situation becomes, the lesser amount of good the United Nations will be able to do to resolve the situation. The worse things are, the more likely international law will be broken, and will be allowed to be broken by the U.N., the ones who are supposed to enforce it
Let’s start off with Condition bravo in the book, which takes place in Cambodia, 1993. The authors state how Bulgarian peacekeepers sent to Cambodia were nothing more than “prison inmates and the patients of psychiatric wards, even though they arrived in military uniform to become UN Blue Helmets.” Kenneth Cain describes how the “blue helmets” were hated by everyone in Cambodia and described them as "A battalion of criminal lunatics who arrive in a lawless land. They’re drunk as sailors, rape vulnerable Cambodian women and crash their UN Land Cruisers with remarkable frequency."
Overall, the Cambodian election is cake, the work is easy and uneventful, the election successful and the trio move on to other peacekeeping assignments, where their fortunes change dramatically. The UN workers did their job and were successful in Cambodia without many instances of corruption. Heidi and Ken go to Somalia and come under siege, Andrew goes to Haiti where he is a helpless and frustrated observer in the face of Haitian warlords. When Heidi and Ken lose a colleague in Mogadishu, their disenchantment for the UN grows. There is evidence of UN corruption here. In Somalia, Cain is caught in a Somali attack on a U.N. ceremony...

You must Login to view the entire paper.
If you are not a member yet, Sign Up for free!