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minority issues were not simply a European concern.
As such, the discussions had served not only to
enhance a more global understanding of the situations
of peoples and groups but also to underscore the need
to be more creative in finding solutions to protect and
promote the rights of groups and communities. During
the general debate participants proposed that minority
claims could also be addressed by means of integration.
It was also proposed that measures for integration be
applied to residential policy-making and to ensuring
the fair representation of minorities in the workplace
and the law enforcement system. The need to provide
for the inclusion of all communities in the Government
and in the allocation of positions on public bodies, as
well as in ensuring a fair share of economic
development, was noted. Moreover, attention was also
drawn to the need to differentiate between cultural
autonomy and territorial democracy, it being indicated
that cultural autonomy effectively sought to protect a
culturally defined, rather than a territorially defined,
group, through the right to self-rule or selfmanagement. Several participants spoke about the need
for territorial decentralization to provide for the
inclusion of all communities and groups and about the
dangers of exclusion arising from ethnically based
Governments.
21. Following this first debate on integration and
autonomy, the Working Group recommended that there
be further reflection on autonomist and integrative
approaches to minority protection in multicultural
societies, with a view to adopting a set of
recommendations on these matters at the end of its
eighth session, in May 2002. In preparation for this
future debate, the Working Groups requested, inter alia,
that its Chairperson-Rapporteur draft a paper
identifying the effective and legitimate means which
can be used by minorities to promote their rights and
by Governments to maintain or restore human rightsbased law and order. It was also decided that the
Working Group, at its eighth session, in May 2002,
would focus on the role of national development
policies and international development cooperation in
promoting and protecting the rights of minorities with a
view to preparing recommendations for adoption at its
ninth session in 2003.
6
VI. Conclusions
22. In conclusion, there is increasing awareness that
the protection and promotion of the rights of minorities
can lead to stable societies, often addressing those
group inequalities, particularly in the social, economic,
cultural and political fields, that can be a root cause of
conflicts. Where certain issues to be addressed are
global in character, the Working Group on Minorities
has chosen to formulate future recommendations
concerning ways and means of ensuring the effective
participation of minorities in public life as well as
ensuring the socio-economic development of minority
communities. The Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights and the Working
Group have also shown significant interest in pursuing
recommendations to create awareness of practices that
exist regionally and nationally, and from which lessons
may be learned, for promoting the effective
implementation of the provisions of the Declaration on
the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic,
Religious and Linguistic Minorities. For example, the
Working Group has, inter alia, encouraged regional
organizations to explore the possibility of establishing
or strengthening regional institutions and mandates for
the protection and promotion of the rights of
minorities. In addition, the Commission on Human
Rights and the Economic and Social Council have
requested OHCHR to facilitate the sharing of
information and cooperation between such existing
international mechanisms as the United Nations treaty
bodies and regional human rights systems for the better
protection of the rights of minorities.
Notes
1
The Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to
National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities
was adopted by the General Assembly in its resolution
47/135 of 18 December 1992.