Minority Recognition and the Diversity Deficit: Comparative Perspectives

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Description

This book addresses one of the most serious societal questions of our time: how to create new spaces and frameworks for minority recognition given the State-centric sovereignty discourse and the persisting equality jargon that dominate today’s world. By so doing it approaches minority rights by means of a critical engagement with its underlying premises. Notably, it makes attempts to both construct and reconfigure neglected legal categories, in particular collective rights, and to deconstruct domestic constitutional orders. More precisely, it does so through diametrically opposed levels of analysis, that is top-down and bottom-up logics, by exploring sociolegal strategies, forms and formats of governance on the one hand, and grassroots demands on the other. Drawing on empirical findings in Europe and Latin America, the book gives us a sense of how recognition needs to be contextualised against the background of right-wing trends in Europe and the re-building of the State in the Andes. This is a fascinating study of one of the key questions engaging human rights, minority studies and discrimination law.

Additional information

Dimensions 15.6 × 23.4 cm
Format

Hardback

Imprint

Language

Pages

256

Publisher

Year Published

17-11-2022

About The Author

Jessika Eichler is Associate at the Law & Anthropology Department at the Max Planck Institute and trAndeS, FU Berlin, and a HDR candidate with Sciences Po Paris, France.
Kyriaki Topidi is Senior Researcher at the European Centre for Minority Issues, Germany.

ISBN 10

1509953078

Publication City/Country

London, United Kingdom

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