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MINORITY
RIGHTS AS A BRANCH OF HUMAN RIGHTS
(co-organized
with Minority Rights Group, London)
30 June - 11 July, 1997
Course Director:
Tibor Várady(CEU)
Executive co-directors:
Anna-Maria
Bíró (Minority Rights Group London)
Nenad Dimitrijevic (CEU)
Resource Persons:
Gudmundur Alfredsson
(University of Lund)
Anna-Maria Bíró (Minority Rights Group, London)
Ivan Gyurcsik (Slovakia)
Guy Haarscher (Universite Libre, Bruxelles)
Géza Hercegh (International Court of Justice, the Hague)
Will Kymlicka (Canada)
János Kis (CEU)
György Konrád (Hungary)
Zoran Pajic (King's College, London)
Alan Philips (Minority Rights Group, London)
András Sajó (CEU)
Tibor Várady (CEU)
Statement of Purpose
Within the last decades minority rights
have become one of the most controversial notions in the domain of human
rights. The term is loaded with political aspirations, and it has become
a symbol of rhetorically projected positions of the adversaries in the
debate. But, regardless of academic/ideological/political standpoints,
one can hardly deny the gravity of the problem: many among contemporary
polities are heterogeneous, that is decisively marked by parallel existence
of different ethnic, religious, cultural groups. These polities are thus
"naturally", i.e. pre-politically divided into majorities and minorities.
Given the intensity of the group affiliation, and given that the identification
with the primary group tends toward the translation in the world of politics,
such communities are often marked by deep inter-group conflicts.
Since members of non-titular nations
in plural societies are "destined" to remain in a minority position, the
problem of human rights in such a context gets special connotations. To
look for morally defensible, legally efficient and politically feasible
concept of minority rights, is one of the most important challenges facing
contemporary democracies. Many recent examples of ethnically based violence
in plural societies only confirm the importance of establishing the right
measure of minority rights, because this is what divides multicultural
co-existence from ethnicity- legitimized majoritarian oppression.
The objective of the course would
be to explore this complex theme by combining different, yet closely related
methodological approaches: legal and political philosophy, constitutional
law, international law, sociology, political science.
We hope that the proposed course
would both meet the goals of the SUN and contribute to the development
of the CEU, which are objectives that, in our understan-ding, are to be
equalled to the development of open, democratic societies in post-communist
states. More specifically, we are planning to bring together scholars from
the whole region (as well as a number of scholars from the Western countries)
and to discuss - guided by principles of tolerance and mutual respect,
through an ideologically and politically undistorted communication - the
capacities of those who are different to live together without violating
neither human freedom, nor specific group identities.
Main topics of the course
1) Nation(s) and Community: How are Multinational
States Possible
2) Individual versus Collective Rights
3) Position of Minority Rights Within
the Realm of Human Rights
4) The international and the European
Framework of the Minority Rights
5) Various forms of Minority Autonomies
in Europe
6) Case Study: Stable Democracies and
"Uncertain" Democracies: the Workshop on the Minority Rights in Romania
and Macedonia
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