Invitation: Public Lecture by the World Leading Minority Rights Scholar
Dear colleagues, you are kindly invited to a public lecture On Neighbours and Names: Neighbours and Languages in the EU
by Prof. Fernand de Varennes, Universities of Hong Kong Law School, Pretoria Law School, and Maldives National University, Faculty of Shari’ah and Law.
8 March 2013, Senaatskamer, Academiegebouw, 13.30
Prof. Fernand de Varennes, one of the most renowned scholars in the field of law and language, will focus on the right to a name in the European legal context, critically analyzing the jurisprudence of the ECt.HR, ECJ and the UN Human Rights Committee. He holds degrees from LSE and Maastricht and has represented linguistic minorities in countless cases in front of the international tribunals. Prof. de Varennes is 2004 Linguapax Award laureate (Barcelona, Spain), the Tip O’Neill Peace Fellowship recipient (Northern Ireland) and was nominated for the Gwangju Prize for Human Rights (Gwangju, South Korea). He has been a guest professor at 20 Universities worldwide, including in China, Indonesia, Japan, the Maldives, Italy, La Réunion, Finland, Ethiopia and Northern Ireland among numerous others and is a founding editor-in-chief of the Asia-Pacific Journal of Human Rights and the Law.
As an advocate committed to the protection of human rights, rights of minorities and indigenous peoples, Prof. de Varennes plays an advisory role in court litigation programmes at Minority Rights Group International and Interights, both in London, and sits on the advisory board of a number of research centres and scientific journals in Asia and Europe. He was consulted on the Organization of American States’ draft Inter-American Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, on OSCE initiatives dealing with the rights of minorities (the Lund Recommendations on the Effective Participation of National Minorities in Public Life and the Oslo Recommendations regarding the Linguistic Rights of National Minorities), on the conformity of Bhutan’s Constitution with international human rights standards, as well as prepared responses with minority organisations on proposed language legislation for Northern Ireland and South Africa. In legal proceedings internationally, he has provided advice in the (successful) case of Raihman v. Latvia, before the United Nations’ Human Rights Committee. He has also been involved in other proceedings presently before the European Court of Human Rights (Catan et al. v. Moldova and Russia), among others.
Dr de Varennes’ research and publications record spans some 150 publications in 26 languages covering six continents. In addition to traditional scientific books and articles, he continues to write reports for international governmental organisations such as UNESCO (on the rights of migrants), the UN Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (on indigenous language rights), and the UN Working Group on the Rights of Minorities and UN Independent Expert on Minorities (language rights, prevention of ethnic conflicts, political participation of minorities), as well as for non-governmental organisations such as Minority Rights International (on minorities in Southeast Asia, Central Asia and East Asia).
The public lecture is delivered upon the invitation of Prof. Dimitry Kochenov (EU Constituional Law) and makes part of the conference on ‘The Principle of Good Neighbourly Relations in the EU: Theory and Practice’, which Professor Kochenov co-organised with Elena Basheska, a Ph.D. student at the department of European and Economic Law.
Last modified: | 19 January 2024 1.05 p.m. |
More news
-
16 December 2024
Liekuut | Alette Smeulers: 'Human rights violations are also about us'
'The Middle East is ablaze, a war is raging in Eastern Europe, and the US elected an extremely unpredictable president who is undermining democracy: human rights are under pressure.
-
18 November 2024
Bigger than femicide alone – the role of gender in violence
In the media and politics, there is rising attention to femicide — the murder of women, often by a partner or a former partner. Martina Althoff, associate professor of Criminology, welcomes this but is critical at the same time.
-
09 October 2024
Automating the taking of witness statements in criminal cases using AI
Can the taking of witness statements in criminal cases be automated using artificial intelligence (AI)? The University of Groningen (UG), Capgemini Netherlands and Scotty AI signed a letter of intent today to jointly research the development of an...