Research & Development Management
ASIA-PACIFIC CENTRE FOR HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE PREVENTION OF ETHNIC CONFLICT - 1999 ANNUAL REPORT
To be submitted to the Board of the Division in which the Centre/Institute is
located. The report should be submitted to the first available meeting of the
Division Board after 31 March in the year following the reference year, and then
to the Board of Research with the comments of the Division Board.
University Research Centres and other centres/institutes which have major
external reporting requirements may quote or attach extracts from those reports
if appropriate.
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Centre/Institute :
Asia-Pacific Centre for Human Rights and the Prevention of Ethnic Conflict
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Year: 1999 |
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Details of staffing and other resources available to the
Centre/Institute (include research grants or contracts awarded, and other
financial information):
RATAC (School of Law) for editing volume 2 of the book series
"Asia-Pacific Human Rights Documents and Resources" ($1,600);
presentation of paper on minority rights and ethnic conflicts in Budapest
($360).
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Outline the activities and achievements of the Centre/Institute last
year, including a critical evaluation of progress in relation to funding
and other opportunities (in no more than one A4 page):
The main activities of the Centre in 1999 has been trying to obtain
funding for a collaborative project with the Indonesian National Human
Rights Commission on ethnic conflicts and work on the inaugural issue of,
the Asia-Pacific Journal on Human Rights and the Law.
The inaugural issue of the journal is coming out in the first half of
2000 and will be distributed worldwide by Kluwer Law International, one of
the world’s leading publishers in international law.
Despite numerous funding applications, including with the ARC Research
grants, no funding has been provided for the collaborative project with
the Indonesian National Human Rights Commission, which is somewhat ironic
given the increase levels of ethnic tensions and violence which have
occurred in Indonesia since the Centre’s efforts to work in this area in
cooperation with one of Indonesia’s leading human rights organisations.
Among other activities of the Centre has been the Director’s
participation in a large number of regional and international seminars and
conferences in order to promote the Centre’s outside stature. These
included presentations at the following events:
"International Law, Human Rights and Minority
Rights: A Legal Approach to Ethnic Conflict Prevention", INCORE
seminar presentation, Aberfoyle House, Londonderry, Northern Ireland, 29
November.
"International Law, Human Rights and Minority
Rights: A Legal Approach to Ethnic Conflict Prevention", Nineteenth
Biennial Conference on the Law of the World, World Jurist Association,
Budapest, Hungary and Vienna, Austria, 4 October 1999.
"States Versus Minorities: A Legal Human Rights
Approach to Understanding the Causes of Ethnic Conflicts in Asia",
Fourth International Conference of the Ethnic Studies Network, Moscow, 10
June 1999.
"Respect for Minority Rights and Ethnic Conflict
Prevention: Future Trends", Seminar presentation at the Human Rights
Law Centre, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK, 29 April 1999.
"International Human Rights and the Protection for
Minorities in the Areas of Political Participation and Citizenship",
Conference organised by the European Centre for Minority Issues and the
Legal Information Centre for Human Rights of Estonia, 8-11 January 1999. |
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Outline the aims of the Centre/Institute for the current year (2000):
The Asia-Pacific Journal on Human Rights and the Law is already
essentially "self-funding", but still requires a great deal of
work in terms of ensuring its smooth and continuous functioning. An
Asia-wide operation such as a law journal requires many volunteers, as
well as partners such as LAWASIA, and NGOs in different parts of the
region. This has begun and will be continued in the next year. A number of
students have been involved, as well as academics from other countries in
Asia. Interest in the journal is already high, with various articles being
submitted and indications of interest from a number of sources.
Periodical publication of the Asia-Pacific Journal on Human Rights and
the Law (2 issues per year). |
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Attach a list of publications for 1999
"Asia-Pacific Human Rights Documents and
Resources", Volume II, Kluwer Law International, The Hague,
Netherlands.
"Tolerance and Inclusion: The Convergence of human
rights and the Work of Tove Skutnabb-Kangas", to be published in Rights
to Language: Equity, Power and Education, Robert Phillipson (ed.),
Mahwah, New Jersey, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
"Les droits de l’Homme et la protection des
minorités linguistiques", in Langues et droits, Hervé
Guillorel and Geneviève Koubi, eds, Bruylant, Bruxelles.
"The Existing Rights of Minorities and
International Law", in Language: A Right and a Resource
(Approaching Linguistic Human Rights), Miklós Kontra, Robert
Phillipson, Tove Skutnabb-Kangas and Tibor Várady, eds, Central European
University Press, Budapest.
"Linguistic Minorities,
International Law and Non-Discrimination" (in German), to be
published in Humanitaeres Voelkerrecht, Institut für
Friedenssicherungsrecht und Humanitäres Völkerrecht, Ruhr-Universität
Bochum, Germany.
"Equality and Non-Discrimination: Fundamental
Principles of Minority Language Rights", (1999) International
Journal on Minority and Group Rights, Volume 6, No. 3, pp. 307-318,
Kluwer Law International, The Hague, Netherlands.
"Non-Discrimination in Language Policies and
International Law" (in Japanese), to be published in Seikei
University Law Journal, Tokyo, Japan.
"Names, Toponomy and International Law" (in
Japanese), Kotoba to Syakai (Language and Society, 1999, No. 1, pp.
87-93, University of Tokyo, Japan. |
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