A/65/287
encountered very few examples of policy at the international level to address these
types of inequalities, although policies at the national level are more common. 8
26. The Carnegie Commission on Preventing Deadly Conflict, a three-year
research project involving 16 eminent scholars in the field of conflict prevention
and resolution, concluded that time and again in the twentieth century, attempts at
suppression of ethnic, cultural or religious differences had led to bloodshed, and in
case after case, the accommodation of diversity within appropriate constitutional
forms had helped to prevent bloodshed. 9
27. The Bureau for Crisis Prevention and Recovery of the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP) has conducted research showing that the
likelihood of conflict increases with rising group inequality. 10 The Minorities at
Risk Project at the University of Maryland monitors indicators for political
discrimination, cultural and economic exclusion and persecution on 283 minority
groups around the world, and has found a significant link between conflict and those
forms of denial of rights.
B.
Early warning indicators
28. Since minority rights are at the root of a significant number of internal
conflicts, incorporating minority rights indicators into early warning systems would
enable an earlier identification of potential conflicts. 11 Minority rights violations are
often among the root causes of conflicts that have long gestation periods, root
causes grounded in grievances that may bubble under the surface for years, or even
decades, before violent conflict breaks out. Other more technical early warning
indicators, such as small arms flows and movements of displaced peoples, tend to
reflect a situation that is already rapidly spiralling into violence. By the time those
indicators trigger attention, grievances may have festered for decades, perhaps
generations — generations of lost opportunities to heal rifts, avert conflict and build
a cohesive society.
29. Some analysts worry about the risk of raising false alarms by flagging
concerns at too early a stage. But if the response to an early warning of patterns of
discrimination is to work with the Government to set up programmes that correct
those patterns, then that has its own value, regardless of the impact on conflict
prevention.
30. Clearly it is necessary to combine monitoring of patterns of economic and
political exclusion, for example, with an analysis of the political and social context,
allowing for an identification of the risk of escalation that is as accurate as possible.
Better insight is needed into why certain situations of systematic exclusion escalate
__________________
8
9
10
11
8
F. Stewart, G. K. Brown and A. Langer, “Major findings and conclusions on the relationship
between horizontal inequalities and conflict”, in Horizontal Inequalities and Conflict:
Understanding Group Violence in Multi-ethnic Societies, Frances Stewart, ed. (New York,
Palgrave Macmillan, 2010).
David A. Hamburg and Cyrus R. Vance, Preventing Deadly Conflict (New York, Carnegie
Corporation of New York, 1997), p. 29.
United Nations Development Programme, Human Development Report 2004: Cultural Liberty in
Today’s Diverse World, pp. 41-42.
S. Srinavasan, Minority Rights, Early Warning and Conflict Prevention: Lessons from Darfur
(London, Minority Rights Group International, 2006).
10-48298