Fifth Session of the Forum on Minority Issues, 27-28 November, 2012
Agenda Item IV
Statement of the Delegation of the United States of America
The United States is pleased to participate in the Forum and to have the opportunity to discuss
good practices in protecting the rights of persons belonging to minorities. The United States has long
been a supporter of the Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious
and Linguistic Minorities and welcomes efforts to implement these protections within domestic legal
systems. The United States has always been a multi-racial, multi-ethnic and multi-religious society and we
are proud of our efforts to safeguard the rights of persons belonging to minorities. The United States
Constitution; the constitutions of the various states; and federal and state law and practice provide strong
and effective protections against discrimination on the basis of race, color, ethnicity, and national origin in
all fields of public endeavor and with regard to substantial private conduct as well.
I'd like to touch briefly and more specifically on the importance of ensuring that persons
belonging to minorities are aware of their rights and have the information and support they need to be
able to exercise them. We think this is an area that warrants further discussion and we appreciate the
attention paid to this issue in the draft recommendations.
As a general matter, information about human rights is readily available in the United States. The
scope and meaning of — and issues concerning enforcement of — individual rights are openly and
vigorously discussed in the media, freely debated within the various political parties and representative
institutions, and litigated before the courts at all levels.