NCERT Solutions for Class 12 Political Science Chapter 4: International Organisations
These Class 12 Political Science Chapter 4 solutions cover International Organisations from Contemporary World Politics, the NCERT textbook for the 2026–27 session. The chapter explains the role of international organisations after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the founding and evolution of the United Nations (UN), the structure and powers of the Security Council including the veto power, the debate over UN reform after the Cold War, India’s case for permanent membership, the working of the UN in a unipolar world, and other key bodies such as the IMF, World Bank, WTO, IAEA, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch. Below you get step-by-step answers to all NCERT Exercises, key concepts, extra practice, MCQs, Assertion–Reason and FAQs.
Class 12 Political Science Chapter 4 – Overview
Chapter 4, International Organisations, examines why the world needs bodies like the United Nations even though they are often criticised as ineffective “talking shops.” An international organisation is not a super-state with authority over its members; it is created by and responds to states, and helps them resolve conflicts peacefully and cooperate on shared challenges like disease and global warming. The UN was founded in 1945 as a successor to the failed League of Nations to prevent war and promote development. The chapter studies the UN’s structure — the General Assembly, the Security Council (5 permanent + 10 non-permanent members), the Secretary-General and specialised agencies. After the Cold War, with the Soviet Union’s collapse and the US as the sole superpower, demands grew to reform the Security Council — its membership, the veto power, and its jurisdiction. The chapter discusses the criteria proposed for new members, India’s candidature for permanent membership, the working of the UN in a unipolar world, and other organisations such as the IMF, World Bank, WTO, IAEA, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.
Key Concepts & Terms
International organisation: a body created by and responsive to states (not a super-state); it comes into being when states agree to its creation, and helps member states resolve problems peacefully and cooperate on shared challenges.
United Nations (UN): founded on 24 October 1945 as a successor to the League of Nations; established immediately after the Second World War to prevent international conflict and facilitate cooperation. By 2011 it had 193 member states.
League of Nations: the international organisation born after the First World War to avoid war; despite initial success it failed to prevent the Second World War (1939–45).
General Assembly: the UN organ where all member states have one vote each and discuss global issues; war, peace and differences between states are debated here as well as in the Security Council.
Security Council: the UN organ chiefly responsible for international peace and security; it has five permanent members (USA, Russia, UK, France, China) and ten non-permanent members elected for two-year terms representing all continents.
Veto power: the privilege of the five permanent members to cast a negative vote that can stall a Security Council resolution even if all other members support it; the non-permanent members do not have it.
Secretary-General: the UN’s most visible public figure and representative head; the present (ninth) Secretary-General is António Guterres (since 1 January 2017).
UN reform — two kinds: (i) reform of the organisation’s structures and processes (mainly the Security Council); and (ii) a review of the issues within the UN’s jurisdiction (e.g. peacekeeping vs development priorities).
Unipolar world: the post-Cold-War order in which the US, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, is the sole superpower whose military, economic and financial power lets it ignore or dominate international organisations.
IMF: the International Monetary Fund, which oversees the international financial system; member states do not enjoy an equal say, as voting weight depends on financial contribution.
World Bank: created in 1944; focuses on developing countries through loans and grants for human development, agriculture, infrastructure and governance; criticised for attaching stringent conditions and forcing free-market reforms.
WTO: the World Trade Organisation, set up in 1995 as successor to the General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs (GATT); it sets the rules for global trade.
IAEA: the International Atomic Energy Agency, established in 1957, which promotes peaceful use of nuclear energy and inspects facilities to prevent military misuse.
NGOs: Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch are international non-governmental organisations that research and campaign for the protection of human rights worldwide.
NCERT “Exercises” — Full Solutions
All questions below are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT textbook’s end-of-chapter Exercises section. Answers are original, written in exam-ready style.
1. Mark correct or wrong against each of the following statements about the veto power. a. Only the permanent members of the Security Council possess the veto power. b. It’s a kind of negative power. c. The Secretary-General uses this power when not satisfied with any decision. d. One veto can stall a Security Council resolution.
2. Mark correct or wrong against each of the following statements about the way the UN functions. a. All security and peace related issues are dealt with in the Security Council. b. Humanitarian policies are implemented by the main organs and specialised agencies spread across the globe. c. Having consensus among the five permanent members on security issues is vital for its implementation. d. The members of the General Assembly are automatically the members of all other principal organs and specialised agencies of the UN.
3. Which among the following would give more weightage to India’s proposal for permanent membership in the Security Council? a. Nuclear capability b. It has been a member of the UN since its inception c. It is located in Asia d. India’s growing economic power and stable political system
4. The UN agency concerned with the safety and peaceful use of nuclear technology is: a. The UN Committee on Disarmament b. International Atomic Energy Agency c. UN International Safeguard Committee d. None of the above
5. WTO is serving as the successor to which of the following organisations a. General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs b. General Arrangement on Trade and Tariffs c. World Health Organisation d. UN Development Programme
6. Fill in the blanks. a. The prime objective of the UN is ___________________________ b. The highest functionary of the UN is called_________________ c. The UN Security Council has _____ permanent and _____non-permanent members. d. ______________________ is the present UN Secretary-General.
7. Match the principal organs and agencies of the UN with their functions:
| Organ / Agency | Function |
|---|---|
| 1. Economic and Social Council | c. Looks into the economic and social welfare of the member countries |
| 2. International Court of Justice | e. Resolves disputes between and among member countries |
| 3. International Atomic Energy Agency | d. Safety and peaceful use of nuclear technology |
| 4. Security Council | b. Preservation of international peace and security |
| 5. UN High Commission for Refugees | f. Provides shelter and medical help during emergencies |
| 6. World Trade Organisation | j. Facilitates free trade among member countries |
| 7. International Monetary Fund | a. Oversees the global financial system |
| 8. General Assembly | g. Debates and discusses global issues |
| 9. World Health Organisation | i. Providing good health for all |
| 10. Secretariat | h. Administration and coordination of UN affairs |
8. What are the functions of the Security Council?
9. As a citizen of India, how would you support India’s candidature for the permanent membership of the Security Council? Justify your proposal.
10. Critically evaluate the difficulties involved in implementing the suggested reforms to reconstruct the UN.
11. Though the UN has failed in preventing wars and related miseries, nations prefer its continuation. What makes the UN an indispensable organisation?
12. ‘Reforming the UN means restructuring of the Security Council’. Do you agree with this statement? Give arguments for or against this position.
Extra Practice Questions
Short Answer Type Questions
Q1. What is an international organisation? Is it a super-state?
Q2. Why was the League of Nations formed, and why is the UN called its successor?
Q3. What was the resolution adopted by the UN General Assembly in 1992 regarding the Security Council?
Q4. What is the IMF, and why do its members not enjoy an equal say?
Q5. Name any four specialised agencies of the UN that deal with social and economic issues.
Long Answer Type Questions
Q1. Explain how the structure of the UN reflected the realities of world politics after the Second World War, and how those realities have since changed.
Q2. Discuss the steps decided at the 2005 UN summit to make the UN more relevant, and explain why they are contentious.
Q3. “The UN is not a great balance to the US, yet it still serves an important purpose in a unipolar world.” Explain.
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. In which year was the United Nations founded?
(a) 1919 (b) 1939 (c) 1945 (d) 1950
2. The United Nations was founded as a successor to which organisation?
(a) The League of Nations (b) The Warsaw Pact (c) NATO (d) The European Union
3. How many permanent members does the UN Security Council have?
(a) Three (b) Five (c) Ten (d) Fifteen
4. Which of the following is NOT a permanent member of the Security Council?
(a) China (b) France (c) India (d) Russia
5. Who is the present (ninth) Secretary-General of the UN?
(a) Kofi Annan (b) Ban Ki-moon (c) António Guterres (d) Boutros Boutros-Ghali
6. The veto power in the Security Council is held by:
(a) all members (b) only the non-permanent members (c) only the five permanent members (d) the Secretary-General
7. The World Bank was created during the Second World War in:
(a) 1944 (b) 1945 (c) 1957 (d) 1995
8. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) was established in:
(a) 1945 (b) 1957 (c) 1965 (d) 1995
9. Non-permanent members of the Security Council are elected for a term of:
(a) one year (b) two years (c) five years (d) ten years
10. Which of the following is an international NGO that campaigns for the protection of human rights?
(a) IMF (b) WTO (c) Amnesty International (d) World Bank
For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both true and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion; (B) Both true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion true, Reason false; (D) Assertion false, Reason true.
A-R 1. Assertion: An international organisation is not a super-state with authority over its members.
Reason: It is created by and responds to states, coming into being only when states agree to its creation.
A-R 2. Assertion: A single veto can stall a Security Council resolution.
Reason: A permanent member can cast a negative vote that blocks a decision even if all other members support it.
A-R 3. Assertion: The members of the General Assembly are automatically members of all other principal organs of the UN.
Reason: The Security Council has only fifteen members, not all UN members.
A-R 4. Assertion: India has a strong claim to permanent membership of the Security Council.
Reason: India is the most populous country and the world’s largest democracy with a record of UN participation.
A-R 5. Assertion: The UN can act as a perfect balance against US dominance in a unipolar world.
Reason: The US is the single largest contributor to the UN and holds veto power within the Security Council.
Exam Tips & Common Mistakes
How to score full marks in this chapter
Memorise the key facts precisely: the UN was founded in 1945, the Security Council has 5 permanent + 10 non-permanent members, the five permanent members are the USA, Russia, UK, France and China, and only they hold the veto. Learn the two kinds of UN reform (structures/processes and jurisdiction) and the three complaints in the 1992 resolution. For India’s candidature, organise your answer around population, democracy, peacekeeping, economic emergence and financial reliability. Use the textbook’s own examples — the 2005 summit steps, the unipolar-world argument, and the roles of IMF, World Bank, WTO, IAEA, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch — to show depth.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Saying the Secretary-General holds veto power — only the five permanent members do.
- Confusing the number of permanent members (5) with non-permanent members (10), or saying the Council has only five members in total (it has 15).
- Calling the WTO a successor to the WHO or UNDP — it succeeded GATT.
- Mixing up the founding years: UN 1945, World Bank 1944, IAEA 1957, WTO 1995.
- Claiming the UN can fully “balance” US power — it provides an arena for dialogue but cannot counter US dominance.
- Treating UN reform as only Security Council restructuring — reform also covers the UN’s jurisdiction and administration.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Chapter 4 of Class 12 Political Science (Contemporary World Politics) about?
Chapter 4, International Organisations, explains the role of international organisations after the Cold War, the founding and structure of the United Nations, the Security Council and veto power, the debate over UN reform, India’s case for permanent membership, the UN in a unipolar world, and bodies like the IMF, World Bank, WTO, IAEA, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.
Who holds the veto power in the UN Security Council?
Only the five permanent members — the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, France and China — hold the veto power. A single negative vote by any of them can stall a resolution even if every other member votes in favour. The ten non-permanent members do not have the veto.
Why does India want permanent membership of the Security Council?
India seeks permanent membership because it is the world’s most populous country and largest democracy, has been a UN member since its inception with a long peacekeeping record, has emerged as a major economic power, and has always paid its UN dues. Its inclusion would also make the Council more representative of the developing world.
