A/HRC/FMI/2017/1
Discussions
During the two-day session, participants will be invited to contribute to four panel
discussions under the general topic “Minority youth: towards diverse and inclusive
societies”. Each panel discussion will be introduced briefly by a number of experts and
facilitated by a moderator, who will guide the discussion towards the formulation of
specific recommendations. Participants will be encouraged to make statements or
comments, to answer questions from the moderator and to suggest recommendations to be
included in the outcome document that the Special Rapporteur will present to the Human
Rights Council at its thirty-seventh session, in March 2018.
2.
Inclusive education to empower minority youth
Participants will build on and update the recommendations prepared at the first session of
the Forum on Minority Issues regarding access to quality and inclusive education (see
A/HRC/10/11/Add.1), and discuss the challenges faced in adapting education systems to
ethnically diverse societies.
They will further discuss the provisions of the Declaration on the Rights of Persons
Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities, in particular those
pertaining to the right of persons belonging to minorities to learn or to have instruction in
their mother tongue. They may reflect on the longer-term benefits of higher education free
from discrimination and of study environments that accommodate diversity. They will
share good practices regarding access to education that is respectful of minority identities
and the promotion of minority youth participation in student life through the formation of
groups, clubs or associations so they can practise their religion, enjoy their culture or speak
their language.
With reference to standards such as the Hague Recommendations Regarding the Education
Rights of National Minorities of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
or the Guidelines on Intercultural Education of the United Nations Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organization, participants will be encouraged to reflect on specific measures
and initiatives, including outreach programmes, targeted scholarships, quotas and other
initiatives such as financial and other support, as a means of addressing exclusion,
underrepresentation and/or dropout of minority youth — specifically young minority
women — in higher education.
Finally, participants may wish to discuss the importance of human rights education from a
young age for both majority and minority youth in order to further awareness and
understanding of minority rights. Participants may wish to explore ways in which minority
youth can be encouraged to engage, early on, in being advocates for human rights, within or
on behalf of their communities.
3.
Participation of minority youth in public life
Participants will reflect on the responsibility of Member States, with regard to the
Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or Ethnic, Religious and
Linguistic Minorities, in relation to the right of young persons belonging to minorities to
participate effectively in public life, including in the political, civil, social, cultural and
economic spheres. Participants will examine how encouraging the participation of minority
youth in public life can lead to more cohesion and to the normalization of diversity in
society more broadly. Good integration policies can create a society in which everyone has
a sense of belonging and of contributing, regardless of their linguistic, cultural or religious
background, and which is respectful of these important aspects of their identity.
Participants will have the opportunity to consider the role of policies and programmes that
are inclusive of the identities of minority youth. In particular, they will consider how
raising awareness of and celebrating cultural, religious and linguistic diversity among
young people may promote positive attitudes on the part of the majority. This may facilitate
inclusion and the realization of the educational, creative and professional potential of
minority youth in the wider society. Consideration will also be given to other State
practices that have succeeded in developing the potential of minority youth to become
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