12 November
2009
UN Forum on Minorities
Agenda Item 4
Conditions required for effective political participation
Delivered by: Dr. Corinne Lennox, Lecturer in Human Rights, University of
London, UK Corinne.Lennox@sas.ac.uk
Madame Chairperson,
I would like to address the subject of conditions required for the
effective participation of minorities in institutions of global
governance.
Political opportunities in the domestic sphere often are blocked or ineffective for
minority actors. In an effort to open these domestic political spaces, minority
actors use spaces in the international sphere to engage in political dialogue with
their own state actors, international organisations and other states. In the halls of
international governance structures, barriers of discrimination can be less
institutionalised, opportunities for dialogue with state actors can be more open
and mobilisation among minority communities can be stronger.
Minorities also are often affected differently by challenges faced in the global .
commons. For example, environmental degradation can cause further harm to
minorities who face environmental racism domestically. Minority participation in
decision-making over solutions to these global problems is often weak. They
typically are not invited to make recommendations based on their own experience
and expertise that would help address these global problems — for example,
minority actors could advise on, strategies to ensure that responses to the global
economic crisis take account of discrimination and its impact on limiting access
to financial services by minorities.
Minority actors are often excluded from existing civil society participation
structures in global governance. In the Central American Free Trade Agreement,
for example, a civil society consultation mechanism was created but
Afro-descendants were not given a seat until they mobilised .to demand one.
In the UN, there has been decreasing space for consideration.of minority issues.
While the UN Voluntary Fund for Indigenous Peoples has had some US$ 4.1
million in voluntary contributions from states and other actors over the period
1992-2007, there has been no corresponding Fund for minorities.1 The UN
Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues meets for 10 working days per year, the
UN Forum on Minorities for 2 working days. The, recent Durban Review