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League for Social Reconstruction - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (220 words) |
 | The League for Social Reconstruction was a circle of Canadian socialist intellectuals formed in 1931 by academics advocating radical social and economic reforms and political education as a response to the Great Depression. |
 | The LSR was critical of capitalism and advocated democratic socialist reforms and a planned economy. |
 | Manifesto of the League for Social Reconstruction (1932) |
| From Revolution to Reconstruction: Essays: The League of Nations: The League of Nations (6131 words) |
 | The League to Enforce Peace pressed for the submission of future international disputes to arbitration, and for sanctions to be applied against those countries who refused to submit their disputes to pacific settlement. |
 | Japan's delegate on the League Commission at the Paris Peace Conference, Baron Makino, proposed a sentence be added to the Covenant's preamble stating that the members of the League accepted the principles of the equality of nations and races, and the just and equal treatment for nationals of all countries. |
 | League sanctions were having a definite impact on the Italian economy, but soon proved insufficient to derail Mussolini from his course of action against Abyssinia, mainly because they did not include precisely those vital raw materials—oil, coal, and rubber—that he needed to continue the war. |