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Minorities, Minority Rights and Internal Self-Determination electronic resource by Ulrike Barten.

By: Barten, Ulrike [author.]Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2015Description: XIII, 295 p. 4 illus. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783319088761Subject(s): law | International relations | human rights | Law | Human Rights | International RelationsDDC classification: 341.48 LOC classification: K3236-3268.5Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Part I: Introduction -- The international relations framework -- Classic sources on minority rights and self-determination -- Non-state actors and non-binding instruments -- Legitimacy and justice -- Legitimacy and justice of non-binding instruments -- Part II: Minority rights -- Minority, people, nation -- Understanding self-determination -- Part III: Minority rights and internal self-determination -- Putting together the pieces -- Part IV: Conclusion -- Summary.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The book questions the classic idea of self-determination – the right to self-determination is a right of peoples, not of minorities – by examining the content of the right to self-determination and the content of minority rights. Self-determination has four dimensions: the political, the economic, the social and the cultural dimensions. Minorities have minority rights that touch on most aspects of life as a member of a minority. If there is an overlap between minority rights and the different dimensions of self-determination, the concept that the right to self-determination is only applicable to peoples loses credibility. No global and general conclusion is envisaged; there are restrictions in place. The work is limited to the European framework and is further restricted to classic minorities. The argument is based on a legitimacy and justice approach. The analysis in this book shows that some minority rights overlap with the different dimensions of internal self-determination. In short, classic minorities in Europe have a right to internal self-determination.
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Part I: Introduction -- The international relations framework -- Classic sources on minority rights and self-determination -- Non-state actors and non-binding instruments -- Legitimacy and justice -- Legitimacy and justice of non-binding instruments -- Part II: Minority rights -- Minority, people, nation -- Understanding self-determination -- Part III: Minority rights and internal self-determination -- Putting together the pieces -- Part IV: Conclusion -- Summary.

The book questions the classic idea of self-determination – the right to self-determination is a right of peoples, not of minorities – by examining the content of the right to self-determination and the content of minority rights. Self-determination has four dimensions: the political, the economic, the social and the cultural dimensions. Minorities have minority rights that touch on most aspects of life as a member of a minority. If there is an overlap between minority rights and the different dimensions of self-determination, the concept that the right to self-determination is only applicable to peoples loses credibility. No global and general conclusion is envisaged; there are restrictions in place. The work is limited to the European framework and is further restricted to classic minorities. The argument is based on a legitimacy and justice approach. The analysis in this book shows that some minority rights overlap with the different dimensions of internal self-determination. In short, classic minorities in Europe have a right to internal self-determination.

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