GC: n
S: UN – https://documents.un.org/doc/undoc/gen/n14/704/05/pdf/n1470405.pdf?token=L9ZdYz2CmCcgkqJ9hz&fe=true (last access: 12 May 2024); UN – https://archive.unescwa.org/role-united-nations-promoting-new-global-human-order (last access: 12 May 2024).
N: 1. – new (adj): Middle English neue, from Old English neowe, niowe, earlier niwe “made or established for the first time, fresh, recently made or grown; novel, unheard-of, different from the old; untried, inexperienced, unused,” from Proto-Germanic *neuja- (source also of Old Saxon niuwi, Old Frisian nie, Middle Dutch nieuwe, Dutch nieuw, Old High German niuwl, German neu, Danish and Swedish ny, Gothic niujis “new”).
This is from PIE *newo- “new” (source also of Sanskrit navah, Persian nau, Hittite newash, Greek neos, Lithuanian naujas, Old Church Slavonic novu, Russian novyi, Latin novus, Old Irish nue, Welsh newydd “new”).
– global (adj): 1670s, “spherical,” from globe + –al (1). Meaning “worldwide, universal, pertaining to the whole globe of the earth” is from 1892, from a sense development in French. Global village first attested 1960, popularized, if not coined, by Canadian educator Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980).
– human (adj): mid-15c., humain, humaigne, from Old French humain, umain (adj.) “of or belonging to man” (12c.), from Latin humanus “of man, human,” also “humane, philanthropic, kind, gentle, polite; learned, refined, civilized,” probably related to homo (genitive hominis) “man” (see homunculus) and to humus “earth,” on notion of “earthly beings,” as opposed to the gods (compare Hebrew adam “man,” from adamah “ground”). Cognate with Old Lithuanian zmuo (accusative zmuni) “man, male person.”
As a noun, from 1530s. Its Old English cognate guma (from Proto-Germanic *guman-) survives only in disguise in bridegroom. Related: Humanness. Human rights attested by 1680s; human being by 1690s. Human relations is from 1916; human resources attested by 1907, American English, apparently originally among social Christians and drawn from natural resources.
– order (n): c. 1200, “body of persons living under a religious discipline,” from Old French ordre “position, estate; rule, regulation; religious order” (11c.), from earlier ordene, from Latin ordinem (nominative ordo) “row, line, rank; series, pattern, arrangement, routine,” originally “a row of threads in a loom,” from Proto-Italic *ordn- “row, order” (source also of ordiri “to begin to weave;” compare primordial), which is of uncertain origin. Watkins suggests it is a variant of PIE root *ar- “to fit together,” and De Vaan finds this “semantically attractive.”
2. new global human order: A concept of the late President of Guyana, Dr. Cheddi Jagan, aimed at promoting a new and enlightened partnership for peace and development involving all actors of the world community, based on mutual respect, democratic governance and popular participation. This in order to deal with the challenges of development and poverty eradication and to arrest the growing disparities among and within countries. This term appeared in resolution A/55/L.15/Rev.2 entitled “The role of the United Nations in promotion of a New Global Human Order”, which was tabled by Guyana before the United Nations General Assembly on November 2000 and adopted.
3. new global human order: Concept also stressed by the Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) at the Thirteenth Ministerial Conference of Non-Aligned Countries, held in Cartagena, Colombia from 8 to 9 April 2000.
4. new global human order (EN) = nouvel ordre mondial humain (FR) = nuevo orden humano mundial (ES).
S: 1. Etymonline – https://www.etymonline.com/search?q=new+global+human+order (last access: 12 May 2024). 2 to 4. UNTERM – https://unterm.un.org/unterm2/en/view/31a3bcad-4c5e-451e-b0f9-411e9a69fcc4 (last access: 12 May 2024).
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