The New Commonwealth Society challenged the prevailing notion of absolute national sovereignty, arguing that it was a major obstacle to the prevention of war. They believed that only a supranational authority with the power to limit national sovereignty could effectively prevent international conflicts. To this end, they advocated the creation of an impartial international tribunal and an overwhelming military force that would enforce the rulings of the tribunal. While in exile in Geneva,
Hans Kelsen played a key role in shaping the New Commonwealth Society's views on international law. As a member of the board of its research institute, he wrote
The Legal Process and International Order (1935), which was the first monograph published by the New Commonwealth Research Bureau. There he stressed the importance of international tribunals in creating new laws where existing ones were inadequate, and argued that the elimination of war could only be achieved through the establishment of an international executive power capable of enforcing the judgments of an international court. In 1934, the New Commonwealth Society's
Preliminary Opinion on the Tribunal echoed Kelsen's views on the role of international tribunals. In June 1936,
Davies passionately urged
Churchill to take a leading role in the New Commonwealth Society and use it to save Europe from the looming catastrophe. According to
Roy Jenkins, Churchill responded "with an enthusiasm which was only slightly wary." In a speech to the Society in May 1937, Churchill said Some of the ideas of the New Commonwealth Society were later incorporated into the
United Nations Charter. == Publications ==