Pudding
Pudding
this just means that organizations that are alliances like the league of nations even though it failed and the united nations.
United Nations - and its parts - , European Union, Council of Europe
Alliances now know that total war is out of the question to settle any differences. If there's to be a war, it will be a LIMITED one, without Atomic weapons.
The media often portray business organizations as warring enemies who define their own success by the demise of their competitors. Executives sometimes use similar imagery to motivate their "troops." What such images ignore are the strong interdependencies among business organizations and the degree to which cooperation results in mutual gains. Just as nations have discovered the benefits of economic cooperation, businesses have learned that success often depends on forming strategic alliances. Successfully managing strategic alliances is surprisingly difficult, however. The 1998 DaimlerChrysler cross-border merger illustrates some of the management challenges inherent in managing cross-border alliances. Competitive forces in the global auto industry initially led the two companies to merge. The combination looked good on paper, but cultural differences interfered with management's ability to quickly reap the economic benefits they had anticipated.
~Alliances~Alliances~Alliances~Alliances~
- language - culture - population - size of country - type of government - standard of living - geography - neighbors - historical alliances
Personal alliances in the workplace can be damaged by lack of communication, betrayal of trust, and conflicting interests. Gossip, competition, and non-collaborative behavior can also harm personal alliances.
By moving and shifting forces and resouces under a unified command of a leader selected and agreed upon by treaty nations.
Cold War Alliances
What was unusual about the farmers' alliances
No, in the Middle Ages, crafts organizations were called guilds, and their function was rather different from the function of a union. The guilds regulated trade in the craft, including standards, who could be involved, what the educational requirements were, and to some extent the market conditions, prices, and so on. Guilds also formed alliances with other crafts guilds, just as unions do, but also with trade guilds. Sometimes these alliances actually took over the governments of towns and cities. The Hanseatic League, which was an international organization, was an alliance of the local guild alliances, and it entered into its own treaties, had its own military ability, and waged its own wars.