Title: EU Enlargement in Eastern Europe
1EU Enlargement in Eastern Europe
2Is Cultural Diversity Sustainable?
- What is the EU stance?
- Who ensures compliance?
- What are potential outcomes?
3EU Charter of Fundamental Rights
- Sets out in a single text the whole range of
- Civil
- Political
- Economic
- Social rights
- of European citizens and all persons resident in
the EU.
4The Rights
- These rights are divided into six sections
- Dignity
- Freedoms
- Equality
- Solidarity
- Citizens' rights
- Justice
5Derivation of the Rights
- Based on
- Fundamental rights and freedoms recognised by the
European Convention on Human Rights - Constitutional traditions of the EU Member States
- Council of Europe's Social Charter
- Community Charter of Fundamental Social Rights of
Workers - Other international conventions to which the
European Union or its Member States are parties
6Discrimination
- Article 20
- Equality before the law
- Everyone is equal before the law.
- Article 21
- Non-discrimination
- 1. Any discrimination based on any ground such as
sex, race, colour, ethnic or social origin,
genetic features, language, religion or belief,
political or any other opinion, membership of a
national minority, - property, birth, disability, age or sexual
orientation shall be prohibited. - 2. Within the scope of application of the Treaty
establishing the European Community and of the
Treaty on European Union, and without prejudice
to the special provisions of those Treaties, any
discrimination on grounds of nationality shall be
prohibited.
7Discrimination
- Article 22
- Cultural, religious and linguistic diversity
- The Union shall respect cultural, religious and
linguistic diversity.
8Enforcement
- Article 51
- Scope
- 1. The provisions of this Charter are addressed
to the institutions and bodies of the Union with
due regard for the principle of subsidiarity and
to the Member States only when they are
implementing Union law. They shall therefore
respect the rights, observe the principles and
promote the application thereof in accordance
with their respective powers. - 2. This Charter does not establish any new power
or task for the Community or the Union, or modify
powers and tasks defined by the Treaties.
9Enforcement
- Article 52
- Scope of guaranteed rights
- 1. Any limitation on the exercise of the rights
and freedoms recognised by this Charter must be
provided for by law and respect the essence of
those rights and freedoms. Subject to the
principle of proportionality, limitations may be
made only if they are necessary and genuinely
meet objectives of general interest recognised by
the Union or the need to protect the rights and
freedoms of others.
10Specific Cases Gender in Labour Policy
- Regulations in gender regimes tell us what is the
role of women in the society. - In Nordic countries gender regulations are
concrete measures - In the Southern regions of Europe gender
regulations are only a strategy or a goal for
some other field of policy. - On the EU level gender regulations have a strong
tradition. - In Nordic countries women have had traditionally
a strong role in working life and in labour
relations where as in Germany for instance mens
role as the supporters of family has been more
important. Therefore when the union considers
different employment models it faces different
cultural backgrounds and values. - The EU will most probably take direction to
German model of labour policies and regulations
in the future
11Specific Cases - Religion
- European Union draft constitution says the Union
is founded on the values of "respect for human
dignity, liberty, democracy and respect for
human rights." - But the draft does not explicitly mention God or
the region's Christian traditions.
12Specific Cases - Religion
- France and Spain for exclusion
- Poland against exclusion
- "To reflect the social realities of its people,
the EU must be institutionally separate from the
religious communities. But in many questions of
moral values it can refer to these communities,
work together with them or bear in mind the
societal effect of their conscience-building
activities. - Hungarian Archbishop Peter Erdö
13Specific Cases Cultural Traditions
- 1 October 2003
- The European Commission today condemned the
forced marriage of 12-year-old Romany girl in
Romania, and said Bucharest should have acted to
stop the marriage. - The Romany girl tried to flee the arranged
marriage over the weekend, but was forced to go
through with the wedding by her father, the
self-proclaimed king of the Gypsies (Roma). - Although the couple was under the legal age of
sexual consent and marriage, Bucharest
authorities did not stop the event. But they
later opened an inquiry into whether the girl was
the victim of statutory rape. - EU Social Affairs Commissioner Anna
Diamantopoulou today said that Romania's EU
ambitions mean it must maintain high standards of
human rights. She said that when traditions and
human rights clash, rights must prevail.
14European Academy
- Consider
- If economic integration is proceeding
relentlessly, driven by the introduction of the
euro and by pan-European marketing. - Can individual cultures survive and flourish amid
these powerful commercializing and standardizing
impulses?
15European Academy - Findings
- EU law has not yet "found a solid balance"
between unity (meaning support for the common
market) and diversity, in terms of support for
cultures and languages. - The issue of diversity and minority rights will
grow in importance with the expansion of the
European Union. - This will be the challenge of the coming years,
especially with the Eastern enlargement, which
will bring in so much more diversity. - Followed by the migration pressure coming up only
now in the next 10 years which also brings
diversity.
16European Academy - Findings
- The concept of the nation-state per se is
actually an enemy to diversity, because the
nation-state starts from the presumption that to
have a strong linkage between the citizen and the
state, you have to create the idea that there is
homogeneity in the people of the state
17European Academy - Findings
- One way to preserve diversity and also to protect
minority cultures is through a more regionalized
system, at least in cases where culture is based
on territory - Does not apply to a dispersed minority, like the
Roma, for whom the concept of territorial
autonomy is not relevant - What is interesting is that if you have a state
which starts regionalizing you see that the
regional entity has much more sympathy to the
European level than the national level has - For example, if you look at Wales, or the
Scottish, or the Catalans, they are all very
pro-European, because they see in the European
level a new mode of identifying, apart from the
classic nationhood link
18European Academy - Findings
- Ensure that EU law avoids placing limits on
diversity at the European level - European Commission could propose legislation
calling for any planned measures to be examined
to ensure they did not diminish diversity in
Europe - What the EU cannot do is impose measures on
member states to make them more diverse
19The Opposing View
- Contribution of culture to strengthening social
cohesion - Preserving cultural diversity
- Knowledge of other "regions and peoples" through
increased awareness of cultural diversity
increases citizens' interest in European issues
which can serve as a basis for the building of
the new Europe. - Ensure that cultural differences do not provoke
disharmony but instead become an instrument for
strengthening and uniting people in a
multicultural, multilingual Europe, based on
solidarity. - Conference on Cultural Diversity Europe's Wealth
- 17 October 2003 Graz
- Speech given by Mr. Henning Jensen
20Possible Outcomes Policy Level
- It is an irony of this top-down process of
regional formation, moreover, that a key goal of
creating structures able to absorb EU
cohesion/structural funds has not been achieved,
since the same centralising spirit that hampered
decentralisation is also stalling the creation of
regions that the EU will consider competent to
receive substantial funding. - Sub-national levels of administration are not
consulted at the centre by all accounts, and
remain distinctly unprepared for EU entry, and
yet it will be these levels which will bear the
main responsibility for the implementation of new
legislation in entirely new areas. As reports on
this area have show, moreover, most regional
community level organisations lack integrated
information about the changes that will occur in
their jurisdictions as they relate to the EU. - The Changing Power of the State in Eastern Europe
- Abby Innes
21Possible Outcomes Personal Level
- The 21 Configuration of Europe
- the incorporation of East European states into
the EU, from a cultural point of view, has
greater potential for the deepening of European
integration than for its erosion. - Applicant states from the EU are moving towards
full membership in what can be called the 21
configuration of Europe. - This leads us to the conclusion that in the
emerging European quasi-states all socially
mobile Europeans must be fluent in the
continental language, English. Obviously they
must - also be fluent in the state language in which
they live, so biligualism (the 2 of 21) is
becoming a European standard.
22Possible Outcomes Personal Level
- Despite the diversity of the national and
nationality cultures that characterise the EU
states there is an emergent cultural
configuration that represents a common European
cultural sphere. Despite this diversity between
nations there exists a coherent cultural system
that enables most Europeans to act appropriately
according to both local and European standards
within the European Union. - There is an emerging lingua franca used parallel
with state languages and besides, there are
protected minority languages. - In religion the accepted European norm is to
support secular Christianity, respecting national
churches and the minority religious groups.