Conflict and Tension 1918-1939Memory Aid

Memory Aids: Lock In the Key Facts

Part of League of Nations StructureGCSE History

This memory aid covers Memory Aids: Lock In the Key Facts within League of Nations Structure for GCSE History. Revise League of Nations Structure in Conflict and Tension 1918-1939 for GCSE History with 8 exam-style questions and 5 flashcards. This topic shows up very often in GCSE exams, so students should be able to explain it clearly, not just recognise the term. It is section 8 of 11 in this topic. Use it for quick recall, then test yourself straight afterwards so the memory aid becomes usable in an answer.

Topic position

Section 8 of 11

Practice

8 questions

Recall

5 flashcards

🧠 Memory Aids: Lock In the Key Facts

Structure mnemonic — "SIDE" (the four main bodies of the League):

  • S — Secretariat (civil service, based in Geneva)
  • I — International Court of Justice (at The Hague, settled legal disputes)
  • D — Decisions needed unanimity (the Assembly's fatal weakness)
  • E — Everyone met in the Assembly (all members, once a year)

Plus the Council: the four permanent members were Britain, France, Italy, Japan — think of the Allied powers from WW1, minus the USA.

"No USA = No teeth" — This is the single most important thing to remember about the League's weaknesses. Without America's economy, economic sanctions were leaky (countries just traded with the USA instead). Without America's military, the threat of force was empty. Without America's prestige, the League lacked authority. Every weakness traces back, at least partly, to the USA's absence.

Weaknesses mnemonic — "BUSES" (why the League couldn't go anywhere):

  • B — Britain and France's self-interest undermined impartiality
  • U — USA absent (world's strongest economy and military — absent)
  • S — Slow decisions (Assembly met once a year; unanimity required)
  • E — Economic sanctions were weak without the USA and full compliance
  • S — Structure flawed (no army, veto system, unanimous voting)

Key dates to know cold:

  • January 1918 — Wilson announces his Fourteen Points (Point 14: the League)
  • June 1919 — Treaty of Versailles signed; League Covenant included as Part One
  • November 1919 — US Senate rejects League membership (55–39)
  • January 1920 — League of Nations holds its first meeting in Geneva
  • 1926 — Germany admitted to the League (briefly makes it more credible)
  • 1931 — Japan invades Manchuria; League's first major failure
  • 1933 — Germany and Japan leave the League (fatally weakened)
  • 1935–36 — Abyssinian Crisis; Italy defies League; League collapses as a force
  • 1946 — League formally dissolved; replaced by the United Nations

Visual association — "The toothless referee": Picture a football referee with no yellow or red cards, no whistle, and no power to send players off — only the power to shout "that was wrong!" at them. That is the League of Nations. It could see the foul. It could condemn the foul. But without the USA's economic muscle and a standing army, it could not make anyone stop fouling.

Keep building this topic

Read this section alongside the surrounding pages in League of Nations Structure. That gives you the full topic sequence instead of a single isolated revision point.

Practice Questions for League of Nations Structure

Which major country never joined the League of Nations?

  • A. Britain
  • B. France
  • C. The USA
  • D. Italy
1 markfoundation

What was meant by 'collective security' in the League of Nations?

  • A. Each country would build up its own army for protection
  • B. All members would unite against any country that attacked another
  • C. Britain and France would protect all other countries
  • D. Countries would sign individual defence treaties with each other
1 markfoundation

Quick Recall Flashcards

Where was the League based?
Geneva, Switzerland (neutral country)
League's biggest weakness?
USA never joined + no army of its own

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