The ombudsman should identify minority-related international monitoring
bodies or mechanisms, and international NGOs active in the minority protection
field.
In order to ensure that the minority ombudsman institution is fully appraised of
international developments, it is crucial that it identifies bodies with which it should
develop contacts, and that it has a strategy to ensure that such contacts are maintained.
The institution should identify all the treaty bodies created under all the international instruments to which the state is a party and all monitoring bodies of international organizations to which the state belongs which may have a minorities remit.
The institution should, however, also identify treaty bodies under minorities-related
instruments and monitoring bodies of international organizations of which the state
is not a party. The institution should then contact such bodies, and have the institution put on all electronic and other mailing lists to ensure that it is in receipt of all
information disseminated by such bodies. It should also send to such bodies any
newsletter or other output of the sort described above that is produced by the institution which may be of interest or use to the treaty body.
PART III
Cooperation with Similar Institutions in
Other Jurisdictions, and International
Agencies and Institutions
The institution should also identify bodies with a similar remit to its own in other jurisdictions; such institutions in neighbouring countries or within the region will probably be of greatest relevance. Again, once such bodies are established, contact
should be made, and mechanisms for the mutual exchange of information should
be established. The institution should also identify international NGOs dealing
with minority issues, and establish the same sort of contacts and information-exchange mechanisms. Finally, the institution should identify university departments,
research institutes, and individual researchers who are active in the area of minorities, and ensure that contact is made with them and that links are established.
If links of the sort described above are established, it is likely that the minority ombudsman institution will begin to receive large amounts of documentation. Once
again, it is essential that a library coordinator/research officer monitors such information, making sure that documents are recorded and catalogued in a manner
which allows for quick and easy retrieval. Such information could also be monitored
for the purposes of domestic distribution, in the manner described above, and for
the purposes of identifying possible developments relevant for staff training.
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