A Worldly Affair

New York, the United Nations, and the Story Behind Their Unlikely Bond

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Pub Date Sep 01 2017 | Archive Date Jul 31 2017

Description

For more than seven decades, New York City and the United Nations have shared the island of Manhattan, living and working together in a bond that has been likened to a long marriage-both tempestuous and supportive, quarrelsome and committed. A Worldly Affair tells the story of this hot and cold romance, from the 1940s when Mayor Fiorello La Guardia was doggedly determined to bring the new world body to New York, to the UN's flat rejection of the city's offer, then its abrupt change of course in the face of a Rockefeller gift, and on to some tense, troubling decades that followed.

Racial prejudice and anti-Communist passions challenged the young international institution. Spies, scofflaw diplomats, provocative foreign visitors, and controversial UN-member policy positions tested New Yorkers' patience. And all the while, the UN's growth-from its original 51 member states to 193 by 2017-placed demands on the surrounding metropolis for everything from more office space, to more security, to better housing and schools for the international community's children. As the city worked to accommodate the world body's needs-often in the face of competition from other locales vying to host at least parts of the UN entity-New Yorkers at times grew to resent its encroachment on their neighborhoods, and at times even its very presence. It was a constituent sentiment that provoked more than one New York mayor to be less than hospitable in dealing with the city's international guests.

Yet, as the UN moves into its eighth decade in New York-with its headquarters complex freshly renovated and the city proudly proclaiming that the organization adds nearly $4 billion to the New York economy each year-it seems clear the decades-old marriage will last. Whatever the inevitable spats and clashes along the way, the worldly affair is here to stay.

For more than seven decades, New York City and the United Nations have shared the island of Manhattan, living and working together in a bond that has been likened to a long marriage-both tempestuous...


Advance Praise

A Worldly Affair gives us a comprehensive portrait of the important partnership our great city has sustained with the world’s preeminent peace organization. I have always believed that hosting the United Nations provides enormous benefit and added value to our Gorgeous Mosaic, both economically and in reinforcing New York City’s position as the ‘center of the world.’ This important book chronicles the decades-long relationship and the challenges it has weathered.”—David N. Dinkins, 106th Mayor of New York City


A Worldly Affair is a jaunty account of a marriage between the United Nations and its host city, New York, that not even the estimated $3.7 billion the UN community annually provides the city has kept from being rocky. The story involves every mayor going back to La Guardia; swaggering real estate moguls, including Donald Trump; a tabloid caper of a Soviet spy and his American girlfriend; repeated abuses by the striped-pants set of parking laws and diplomatic immunity; periodic threats to send the UN packing to places as diverse as Bonn and New Rochelle; and an enduring struggle over a small plot of asphalt by the East River that only New Yorkers would have the chutzpah to call a playground.”—Warren Hoge, former New York Times United Nations Correspondent

“Pamela Hanlon demystifies the little-understood and decades-long relationship between the United Nations and its host city of New York. A Worldly Affair is an accessible account of the history of that relationship told in an engaging and readable style.”—Linda Fasulo, longtime independent correspondent for NPR and author of An Insider’s Guide to the UN

A Worldly Affair gives us a comprehensive portrait of the important partnership our great city has sustained with the world’s preeminent peace organization. I have always believed that hosting the...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9780823277957
PRICE $29.95 (USD)
PAGES 256

Average rating from 7 members


Featured Reviews

Last year, I read a book about efforts to put the UN HQ in Rapid City, SD. Now, it seems inevitable that they meet in New York City, but in 1946, London, Philadelphia, Greenwich CT and Stockholm all had in proposals--although wealthy landowners in Greenwich feared exotic foreigners and camels wandering their tennis courts. La Guardia lobbied hard, securing an institution which, despite complaints about diplomatic immunity from parking tickets, traffic, spies and protests, now puts $4 billion a year into the city's economy. Hanlon examines how New York keeps the diplomats small fish in a big pond, while being enhanced as a multicultural center and political nexus, and how having the ostensible world capitol in NYC rallied people after 9/11 and continues to signal American Great Power status.

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Very comprehensive text that examines the United Nations, Diplomats, and what that means to the New York area. A bit lengthy, the tone was a challenge but will overall make an excellent resource.

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I received a free electronic copy of this interesting history from Netgalley, Pamela Hanlon, and Fordham University Press in exchange for an honest review.

This is a very intriguing history of the establishment of the United Nations into downtown New York City. I don't recall hearing much about the ins and outs of this comingling of the world organization of nations with the flamboyant and unique NYC. Not a lot of national press made it into the wilds of New Mexico back in the day. Thanks to Pamela Hanlon I am very much involved with this history today. Thank you for bringing this wonderful story to light for those of us not tuned in back in the day.

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