What is the role of ethno-cultural groups in human rights discourse? Under international human rights law, standards are unclear and ambivalent, while traditional analyses have often failed to elucidate and unpack the conceptual, legal, and policy complexities involved. In Ethno-Cultural Diversity and Human Rights, prominent experts chart new territory by addressing contested dimensions of the field. They include the impact of collective interests on rights discourse and nation-building, international law’s responses to group demands for decision-making authority, and concerns for immigration, intersectionality, and peacebuilding. Drawing from diverse scholarship in international law, legal and moral philosophy, and political science, this volume will be essential reading for scholars and practitioners of human rights, diversity, and conflict management.
Collective and group-specific: Can the rights of ethno-cultural minorities be human rights?
págs. 27-58
Why majority rights matter in the context of ethno-cultural diversity: The interlinkage of minority rights, indigenous rights, and majority rights
págs. 59-89
The liberal democratic deficit in minority representation: The case of Spain
págs. 90-121
págs. 125-167
International law, ethno-cultural diversity and indigenous peoples’ rights: A postcolonial approach
págs. 168-187
págs. 188-222
Ethno-cultural diversity and human rights in an era of mass migration: Human rights issues in the balance between separate provision and integration for settled immigrant communities
págs. 225-255
Minorities-within-minorities frameworks, intersectionality and human rights: Overlapping concerns or ships passing in the night?
págs. 256-285
Ethno-cultural diversity and conflict: What contribution can group rights make?
págs. 289-336
págs. 337-369
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