1st Edition

Towards Recognition of Minority Groups Legal and Communication Strategies

    This volume analyses current debates concerning problems in the nature, justification, and legal protection of human rights for minorities, with reference to the issues surrounding social milieu as a source of any legitimized law, which is in itself in need of legal recognition as well as being an object of legal protection. With contributions from a global network of scientists across several continents, the work examines the debate dedicated to the understanding of the normative framework, expressed in terms of human rights that guarantee autonomous action in public and private for minority groups as well as individuals. The chapters go on to study the particular claims that need to be audible and visible for others in the public sphere with reference to the legal protection of human rights. The work concludes with the completion of an interpretative circle debating the issues of legal consensus and legal identity with respect to the specificity of the patterns and modes guiding human interactions. Going beyond the legal analysis to discuss communication strategies in human rights, this collection will be of great interest to those studying the philosophy and theory of law, practical philosophy in general, political sciences and theory of democracy.

    Introduction; Chapter 1 ‘Collective’ Human Rights for the Protection of Minorities? 1 A revised version of the lecture at the conference ‘Grundrechte und Menschenrechte – Derechos Humanos y Garantias Constitucionales’ 50 years of FU Berlin, Freie Universität Berlin, 3–5 June, 1998. First published in German: Georg Lohmann, ‘“Kollektive” Menschenrechte zum Schutz ethnischer Minderheiten?’, in Thomas Rentsch (ed.), Anthropologie, Ethik, Politik. Grundfragen der praktischen Philosophie der Gegenwart (Thelem, Dresden, 2004), pp. 92–108 (likewise Dresdener Hefte für Philosophie, Heft 6)., Georg Lohmann; Chapter 2 Value Pluralism and Legal Philosophy: The Impact of Isaiah Berlin and John Gray 1 I wish to thank Mr Maciej Pleszka, LLM for his having kindly made the research into the ECHR judicature for the sake of the present Chapter., Beata Polanowska-Sygulska; Chapter 3 On the Human Right to Science and Culture 1 I would like to express my gratitude to my husband Henrik Andersen, without whose support I would not have been able to write this Chapter. I would also like to express my gratitute to Dr. Nina-Louisa Lorenz Arold for encouraging me in my research and her helpful comments which I have included in the text. I am also extremely grateful to Professor Bartosz Wojciechowski from Lodz University and Dr. Stefan Larsson from Lund University Internet Institute who have been a great source of inspiration during the development of this work., Anna Maria Andersen Nawrot; Chapter 4 On the Possibility of Justifying the Idea of Human Rights 1 The following text was prepared as Part of a research grant financed by The Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education No. NN 110 237839., Tomasz Bekrycht; Chapter 5 Human Rights as an Element of Mutual Recognition and Equality of Opportunity 1 This Chapter was originally written as a Part of the research project No. NN 110 237839 financed by the Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education., Bartosz Wojciechowski; Chapter 6 ‘To Tolerate Means to Insult’ (J.W. v. Goethe): Towards a Social Practice of Recognition, Barbara Weber; Chapter 7 On Paul Ricoeur’s Tribute to Legal Philosophical Issues of Recognition and Reciprocity, Marcin Pieni??ek; Chapter 8 Should There Be an Obligation to Recognize an Individual’s Ascription to a Group? On the Margins of the ‘Right to Exit’ Debate, Micha? Dudek; Chapter 9 Domestic Violence, Oppression and Participatory Parity: An Analysis of Brazilian Law in Light of a Theory of Democratic Justice 1 I would like to thank Ana Lucia Nina Bernardes, Adriana Vidal and Joanna Noronha for their comments on earlier versions of this Chapter. I also would like to thank the Conselho Nacional de Pesquisa for the funding that allowed me to write this Chapter., Marcia Nina Bernardes; Chapter 10 No Court is an Island: Philosophy at the European Court of Human Rights and the European Court of Justice, Nina-Louisa Lorenz Arold; Chapter 11 The Constitutionality of Law vis-à-vis Minority Rights, Milena Korycka-Zirk; Chapter 12 The Problem of Slavery – the Judge Between Moral Conviction and Fidelity to Law, Jerzy Zajad?o; Chapter 13 The Principle of Self-determination and Rights of National Minorities. A Legal and Philosophical Analysis of the Problem Using an Example from the Czech Republic, Tatiana Machalová; Chapter 14 Les Misérables of Thessaloniki in 2011: A Practical Case Study of Human Rights and Human Abuse, Victor Tsilonis; Chapter 15 Human Rights and Transitional Justice in Post-Communist Central-Eastern Europe, Adam Czarnota; Chapter 16 Is Law’s Practical-Cultural Project Condemned to Fail the Test of ‘Contextual Congruence ’? A Dialogue with Hans Albert’s Social Engineering To say it with Joseph Dunne, Back to the Rough Ground. Practical Judgment and the Lure of Technique (University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana, 1997, reprinted in 2001), p. 174., José Manuel Aroso Linhares; Chapter 17 On the Constructivist Premise of Constitutional Patriotism as a Normative Idea 1 The following text was prepared as a Part of a research grant financed by The Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education No. NN 110 237839., Karolina M. Cern; Chapter 18 Flexible Normative Space Between the European Law and the Member State Law as a Source of Constitutional Identity 1 This Chapter was written as a Part of the research project No. NN 110 237839 financed by the Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education., Marek Zirk-Sadowski; Chapter 19 The Complexity of Contemporary Legal Systems – Dilemmas and the Paradoxes of Law’s Legitimacy, TadeuszBiernat;

    Biography

    Marek Zirk-Sadowski is Professor of the Theory and Philosophy of Law at the University of Łódź, Poland. His scholarship focuses on the theory of judicial application and the interpretation of law, the theory of legal values, and the philosophy of European law. He has published more than 120 works in these fields. Since 1994, he has been a judge and since 2004 he has been vice-president of the Supreme Administrative Court of Poland. Bartosz Wojciechowski is Associate Professor in the Department of Legal Theory and the Philosophy of Law, at the Law and Administration Faculty, University of Łódź, Poland. He has published more than 60 articles in Polish, German, English and Czech. Since 2002, he has been a judge, and since 2012 has been a judge of the Supreme Administrative Court of Poland. Karolina M. Cern is Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy, Faculty of Social Sciences, Chair of Ethics, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland, Secretary of the Commission of Philosophy at the Poznań Society of Friends of Arts and Sciences; Visiting Research Associate in the Institute of Education, University of London (VII 2012- VI 2013). She is an author of three monographs and has contributed to a number of journal articles and eight edited collections.

    ’Edited by leading voices in Poland’s academy, this volume consists of an impressive array of contributions on the always-current question of groups’ rights in liberal democracies, encompassing perspectives from both continental and analytical philosophy.’ Ofer Raban, University of Oregon School of Law, USA ’This book offers a comprehensive and critical overview of human rights and the fights for recognition in the sphere of the law. The book fills a gap in the literature of human and minority rights, and is based on concrete legal situations and cases. The work will be of interest to scholars, students and activists concerned with these topics.’ Antal Visegrády, University of Pécs, Hungary 'This text is a representation of all that is good in the continued examination of the complexity of Human Rights. Focusing on the anchor of human rights, the treatment of minority groups, this collection of treatises represents a world-view of a subject often ignored and long debated. The contrast between the philosophical and real world legalities smoothly leads the reader to the implementation and obstacles in the practical application of human rights in a dynamic world society. It has earned immediate incorporation with my program’s curriculum in which I anticipate it to be an invaluable reference in conflict transformation studies.' Jack B. Hamlin, National University, USA