81 Years of the UN Charter: How the United Nations Came About
26 June 2026 marks 81 years of the UN Charter, signed by 50 nations at San Francisco in 1945. Its four purposes under Article 1 still anchor the UN, though issues like climate and cyberwarfare were absent in 1945.
On 26 June 1945, delegates from 50 nations signed the Charter of the United Nations at San Francisco, a document of 111 articles across 19 chapters agreed after two months of negotiation. The conference, formally the United Nations Conference on International Organisation, had begun on 25 April 1945, while the Second World War was still on; the Charter was adopted on 25 June and signed the next day. 26 June 2026 marks 81 years of the Charter.
Article 1 of the Charter set out four core purposes: maintaining international peace and security, developing friendly relations among nations, achieving international cooperation on economic, social, cultural and humanitarian problems, and serving as a centre for harmonising the actions of nations. Notably, the Charter made no mention of the environment, sustainable development, climate, nuclear weapons, pandemics or cyberwarfare — issues that dominate global affairs today.
The Charter built on earlier wartime declarations. The idea took shape with the Atlantic Charter (August 1941) by Roosevelt and Churchill; the Moscow Declaration (October 1943) brought the first firm Soviet commitment to a general international organisation; the Cairo Conference (November 1943) addressed the war against Japan; and the Tehran Conference (late 1943) saw the "Big Three" endorse a peacekeeping body to succeed the failed League of Nations.
For aspirants, the key facts are the date and place of signing, the four purposes under Article 1, the lineage from the Atlantic Charter to the UN, and the link to the League of Nations.
Key Points to Remember
- UN Charter signed on 26 June 1945 at San Francisco by 50 nations; 111 articles, 19 chapters
- Four purposes (Article 1): peace and security, friendly relations, international cooperation, harmonising nations' actions
- No mention of environment, climate, nuclear weapons, pandemics or cyberwarfare
- Lineage: Atlantic Charter (1941), Moscow Declaration (1943), Cairo & Tehran Conferences (1943)
- The UN succeeded the failed League of Nations
Exam Relevance
Relevant for UPSC Prelims & Mains (International Relations & History — UN, its founding and purposes) and SSC/State PCS General Awareness.
Related Articles
India–New Zealand FTA: A Modern Trade Partnership Takes Shape
India and New Zealand are negotiating a Free Trade Agreement offering zero-duty access for Indian …
NCB Report: Myanmar Overtakes Afghanistan as Key Opium Source, Hitting India's East
The NCB's 2026 report says Myanmar has overtaken Afghanistan as a key opium source after …
Twin Earthquakes Devastate Venezuela; India Sends Relief Aid
Twin earthquakes (magnitude 7.5 and 7.2) struck Venezuela on 24 June 2026, killing hundreds. India …
Strait of Hormuz: Why This Narrow Sea Route Still Worries India After …
About one-fifth of the world's oil passes through the narrow Strait of Hormuz. Even after …
Bangladesh Discusses Teesta River Project in Beijing: What It Means for India
Bangladesh discussed a Chinese-backed plan for the shared Teesta river during a Beijing visit on …