European Network of Legal Experts in the Field of Gender Equality

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

European Network of Legal Experts in the Field of Gender Equality View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Archivio della Ricerca - Università degli Studi di Siena ISSN: 2212-5914 EUROPEAN NETWORK OF LEGAL EXPERTS IN THE FIELD OF GENDER EQUALITY European Gender Equality Law Review No. 2 / 2012 IN THIS ISSUE Francesca Bettio Women, Men and the Financial Crisis. Seven Lessons from Europe Hazel Conley Economic Crisis, Austerity and Gender Equality – The UK Case María Amparo Ballester-Pastor Legal Effects of the Economic Crisis on Gender Equality in Spain: Effects on the Right to Reconciliate Work and Family after the 2012 Labour Law Reform EUROPEAN NETWORK OF LEGAL EXPERTS IN THE FIELD OF GENDER EQUALITY European Gender Equality Law Review 2012 - 2 This report was financed by and prepared for the use of the European Commission. It does not necessarily represent the Commission’s official position. This publication was commissioned by the European Commission under the framework programme PROGRESS (Decision 1672/2006/EC of the European Parliament and the Council, OJ L 315/1 of 15.11.2006). For more information on PROGRESS see: http://ec.europa.eu/social/main.jsp?catId=327&langId=en Manuscript completed in November 2012. The information contained in this report reflects, as far as possible, the state of affairs on 10 September 2012. Editorial Board Susanne Burri Hanneke van Eijken Hélène Masse-Dessen Christopher McCrudden Linda Senden Production Susanne Burri Hanneke van Eijken Klaartje Hoeberechts Alison Morley Simone van der Post © European Union, 2012 European Commission Directorate-General for Justice Unit JUST/D1 Equal Treatment Legislation Table of Contents Members of the European Network of Legal Experts in the Field of Gender Equality iii Editorial Gender Equality in Times of Economic Crisis: a Poor Relation or a Ray of Light in Dark Times? 1 Simone van der Post Women, Men and the Financial Crisis. Seven Lessons from Europe 4 Francesca Bettio Economic Crisis, Austerity and Gender Equality – The UK Case 14 Hazel Conley Legal Effects of the Economic Crisis on Gender Equality in Spain: 20 Effects on the Right to Reconciliate Work and Family after the 2012 Labour Law Reform 20 María Amparo Ballester-Pastor EU Policy and Legislative Process Update 30 Hanneke van Eijken Court of Justice of the European Union Case Law Update 33 Hanneke van Eijken European Court of Human Rights Case Law Update 37 Hanneke van Eijken News from the Member States, EEA Countries, Croatia, FYR of Macedonia and Turkey AUSTRIA Neda Bei 43 BELGIUM Jean Jacqmain 46 BULGARIA Genoveva Tisheva 49 CROATIA Nada Bodiroga-Vukobrat 52 CYPRUS Lia Efstratiou-Georgiades 55 CZECH REPUBLIC Kristina Koldinská 58 DENMARK Ruth Nielsen 59 ESTONIA Anu Laas 60 FINLAND Kevät Nousiainen 65 FRANCE Sylvaine Laulom 69 GERMANY Ulrike Lembke 73 GREECE Sophia Koukoulis-Spiliotopoulos 79 HUNGARY Beáta Nacsa 85 ICELAND Herdís Thorgeirsdóttir 90 IRELAND Frances Meenan 92 ITALY Simonetta Renga 95 LATVIA Kristine Dupate 98 LIECHTENSTEIN Nicole Mathé 101 LITHUANIA Tomas Davulis 103 LUXEMBOURG Anik Raskin 105 FYR of MACEDONIA Mirjana Najcevska 107 European Gender Equality Law Review – No. 2/2012 i MALTA Peter G. Xuereb 112 THE NETHERLANDS Rikki Holtmaat 117 NORWAY Helga Aune 121 POLAND Eleonora Zielińska 123 PORTUGAL Maria do Rosário Palma Ramalho 130 ROMANIA Roxana Teşiu 131 SLOVAKIA Zuzana Magurová 134 SLOVENIA Tanja Koderman Sever 137 SPAIN Berta Valdés de la Vega 139 SWEDEN Ann Numhauser-Henning 141 TURKEY Nurhan Süral 142 UNITED KINGOM Aileen McColgan 144 ii European Gender Equality Law Review – No. 2/2012 Members of the European Network of Legal Experts in the Field of Gender Equality Co-ordinator: Susanne Burri, Utrecht University, the Netherlands Assistant co-ordinator Hanneke van Eijken, Utrecht University, the Netherlands Executive Committee: Hélène Masse-Dessen, Barrister at the Conseil d’Etat and Cour de Cassation, France Christopher McCrudden, Queen’s University Belfast, the United Kingdom Linda Senden, Utrecht University, the Netherlands Susanne Burri, Utrecht University, the Netherlands National experts: Neda Bei (Austria), Legal expert in the Vienna Chamber of Labour, Management of Social Affairs Jean Jacqmain (Belgium), Free University of Brussels, Faculty of Law Genoveva Tisheva (Bulgaria), Bulgarian Gender Research Foundation Nada Bodiroga-Vukobrat (Croatia), Professor, Head of Jean Monnet Department of European Public Law / University of Rijeka, Faculty of Law Evangelia Lia Efstratiou-Georgiades (Cyprus), Advocate Kristina Koldinská (Czech Republic), Charles University, Faculty of Law Ruth Nielsen (Denmark), Copenhagen Business School, Law Department Anu Laas (Estonia), Institute of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Tartu Kevät Nousiainen (Finland) Helsinki University, Faculty of Law Sylvaine Laulom (France), University Jean Monnet, Saint-Etienne, Faculty of Law Mirjana Najcevska (FYR of Macedonia), Professor of Human Rights, American College – Skopje and University ‘Ss. Cyril and Methodius’, Institute for Sociological, Political and Juridical Research Ulrike Lembke (Germany), University of Hamburg, Faculty of Law Sophia Koukoulis-Spiliotopoulos (Greece), Attorney at Law Beáta Nacsa (Hungary), Eötvös Loránd University, Department of Labour and Social Law Herdís Thorgeirsdóttir (Iceland), Bifrost University, Faculty of Law Frances Meenan (Ireland), Barrister, Four Courts, Law Library, Dublin Simonetta Renga (Italy), Ferrara University, Faculty of Economics Kristīne Dupate (Latvia), University of Latvia, Faculty of Law Nicole Mathé (Liechtenstein), University of Vienna, Faculty of Law Tomas Davulis (Lithuania), Vilnius University, Faculty of Law Anik Raskin (Luxembourg), National Women’s Council of Luxembourg Peter G. Xuereb (Malta), University of Malta, Faculty of Law Rikki Holtmaat (the Netherlands), Independent Legal Consultant Expert Helga Aune (Norway), University of Oslo, Faculty of Law Eleonora Zielinska (Poland), University of Warsaw, Faculty of Law and Administration Maria do Rosário Palma Ramalho (Portugal), University of Lisbon, Faculty of Law Roxana Teşiu (Romania), Independent Legal Advisor Zuzana Magurová (Slovakia), Slovak Academy of Sciences, Institute of State and Law Tanja Koderman Sever (Slovenia), Independent Legal Advisor Berta Valdés (Spain) University Castilla-La Mancha, Faculty of Law Ann Numhauser-Henning (Sweden), Lund University, Faculty of Law Nurhan Süral (Turkey), Middle East Technical University, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences Aileen McColgan (the United Kingdom), King’s College London European Gender Equality Law Review – No. 2/2012 iii Editorial Gender Equality in Times of Economic Crisis: a Poor Relation or a Ray of Light in Dark Times? Simone van der Post* During the past four years the European Union has been struggling to fight the economic and financial crisis that started in 2008 with the fall of the Lehman Brothers Bank and evolved into the Euro crisis, with the near bankruptcy of Greece and large problems in many other countries (in particular Spain, Italy, Ireland and Portugal).1 This has led to widespread austerity measures, in the Euro zone and outside it.2 Not all European citizens agree with these measures; the streets of (mostly) southern European states were ablaze with protests and strikes against the tough austerity measures.3 These circumstances generally do not leave much room for a discussion on gender equality. As mentioned in Francesca Bettio’s article in this Review, the European Economic Recovery Plan does not mention ‘gender’, ‘women’, or ‘equality’. This, however, does not mean that the economic crisis does not have an impact on gender equality issues. In this thematic edition of the European Gender Equality Law Review, specific attention is paid to the impact of the economic crisis on gender equality issues. The three articles in this edition deal with different aspects of the economic crisis seen from a gender perspective. Also, the reports from the Member States, EEA Countries, Croatia, FYR of Macedonia and Turkey pay special attention to the legal effects of the economic crisis on gender equality issues in the respective countries. In Francesca Bettio’s article, the actual effects of the economic and financial crisis on gender equality issues in Europe are analysed through seven lessons. Objectively, it seems that men are hit harder by the economic crisis, but in the end women are not better off. First of all, women are still at a disadvantage compared with men, economically and in labour situations, so every step back is not helping to realise gender equality goals. Also, the austerity measures implemented in order to finance the financial injection in the European banks and the European Stability Mechanism will now have greater effect on the public sector, in which women are over-represented. Hazel Conley’s article gives an impression of the effects of the British austerity measures on the social position of women in the United Kingdom. She argues that the measures taken by the British Government have a greater impact on women than on men. Most of the cutbacks are in the public sector, entailing that more women will lose their jobs and that * Junior lecturer in European Law at Utrecht University and project assistant of the European Network of Legal Experts in the Field of Gender Equality. 1 For a pictographic overview of the evolution of the Euro crisis, see ‘It’s all Connected: A Spectator’s Guide to the Euro Crisis’ in the New York Times, 22 October 2011, available at: http://www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2011/10/22/opinion/20111023_DATAPOINTS.html?ref=sunday-review,
Recommended publications
  • ESS9 Appendix A3 Political Parties Ed
    APPENDIX A3 POLITICAL PARTIES, ESS9 - 2018 ed. 3.0 Austria 2 Belgium 4 Bulgaria 7 Croatia 8 Cyprus 10 Czechia 12 Denmark 14 Estonia 15 Finland 17 France 19 Germany 20 Hungary 21 Iceland 23 Ireland 25 Italy 26 Latvia 28 Lithuania 31 Montenegro 34 Netherlands 36 Norway 38 Poland 40 Portugal 44 Serbia 47 Slovakia 52 Slovenia 53 Spain 54 Sweden 57 Switzerland 58 United Kingdom 61 Version Notes, ESS9 Appendix A3 POLITICAL PARTIES ESS9 edition 3.0 (published 10.12.20): Changes from previous edition: Additional countries: Denmark, Iceland. ESS9 edition 2.0 (published 15.06.20): Changes from previous edition: Additional countries: Croatia, Latvia, Lithuania, Montenegro, Portugal, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden. Austria 1. Political parties Language used in data file: German Year of last election: 2017 Official party names, English 1. Sozialdemokratische Partei Österreichs (SPÖ) - Social Democratic Party of Austria - 26.9 % names/translation, and size in last 2. Österreichische Volkspartei (ÖVP) - Austrian People's Party - 31.5 % election: 3. Freiheitliche Partei Österreichs (FPÖ) - Freedom Party of Austria - 26.0 % 4. Liste Peter Pilz (PILZ) - PILZ - 4.4 % 5. Die Grünen – Die Grüne Alternative (Grüne) - The Greens – The Green Alternative - 3.8 % 6. Kommunistische Partei Österreichs (KPÖ) - Communist Party of Austria - 0.8 % 7. NEOS – Das Neue Österreich und Liberales Forum (NEOS) - NEOS – The New Austria and Liberal Forum - 5.3 % 8. G!LT - Verein zur Förderung der Offenen Demokratie (GILT) - My Vote Counts! - 1.0 % Description of political parties listed 1. The Social Democratic Party (Sozialdemokratische Partei Österreichs, or SPÖ) is a social above democratic/center-left political party that was founded in 1888 as the Social Democratic Worker's Party (Sozialdemokratische Arbeiterpartei, or SDAP), when Victor Adler managed to unite the various opposing factions.
    [Show full text]
  • Internal Politics and Views on Brexit
    BRIEFING PAPER Number 8362, 2 May 2019 The EU27: Internal Politics By Stefano Fella, Vaughne Miller, Nigel Walker and Views on Brexit Contents: 1. Austria 2. Belgium 3. Bulgaria 4. Croatia 5. Cyprus 6. Czech Republic 7. Denmark 8. Estonia 9. Finland 10. France 11. Germany 12. Greece 13. Hungary 14. Ireland 15. Italy 16. Latvia 17. Lithuania 18. Luxembourg 19. Malta 20. Netherlands 21. Poland 22. Portugal 23. Romania 24. Slovakia 25. Slovenia 26. Spain 27. Sweden www.parliament.uk/commons-library | intranet.parliament.uk/commons-library | [email protected] | @commonslibrary 2 The EU27: Internal Politics and Views on Brexit Contents Summary 6 1. Austria 13 1.1 Key Facts 13 1.2 Background 14 1.3 Current Government and Recent Political Developments 15 1.4 Views on Brexit 17 2. Belgium 25 2.1 Key Facts 25 2.2 Background 25 2.3 Current Government and recent political developments 26 2.4 Views on Brexit 28 3. Bulgaria 32 3.1 Key Facts 32 3.2 Background 32 3.3 Current Government and recent political developments 33 3.4 Views on Brexit 35 4. Croatia 37 4.1 Key Facts 37 4.2 Background 37 4.3 Current Government and recent political developments 38 4.4 Views on Brexit 39 5. Cyprus 42 5.1 Key Facts 42 5.2 Background 42 5.3 Current Government and recent political developments 43 5.4 Views on Brexit 45 6. Czech Republic 49 6.1 Key Facts 49 6.2 Background 49 6.3 Current Government and recent political developments 50 6.4 Views on Brexit 53 7.
    [Show full text]
  • The Russian Population in Latvia
    The Russian Population in Latvia - The Russian Population in Latvia - Puppets of Moscow? Puppets of Moscow? Latvian integration policy concerns a complex of issues such as citizenship, school language Tomas Malmlöf:TheRussianPopulationinLatvia and minority status. The policy has let Latvia become an accepted member of the international community, but it is challenged by domestic Russian-speaking groups and by the Russian TOMAS MALMLÖF Federation. The disagreements originate in the interpretation of Latvian 20th century history and the definition of a national minority, based on the actual Latvian situation. A crucial question is whether Russia exercises any influence on the Latvia-Russian community, giving it an improper impact on Latvian interior affairs. Official Russian compatriot policy seems to have had little success in this, but it has still been able to keep the ethnic question in the Baltic states alive at the international level. Radical Russian free-lancers in ethnic policymaking might be a bigger nuisance for Latvia, but without official Russian support, they are in all likelihood easier to come to terms with. As a group, the Latvia-Russians seem to have reached a critical level of internal organisation with several political parties, NGOs and competing mass media. They have therefore turned into a self-sufficient actor capable of setting its own agenda instead of implementing the agenda of others. Thus the Latvia-Russians are hardly remote-controlled from Moscow, which, of course, does not prevent them from cooperating with different Russian actors when their interests coincide. Tomas Malmlöf is Master of Political Science and Economy and an expert on Russian business questions.
    [Show full text]
  • Codebook: Government Composition, 1960-2019
    Codebook: Government Composition, 1960-2019 Codebook: SUPPLEMENT TO THE COMPARATIVE POLITICAL DATA SET – GOVERNMENT COMPOSITION 1960-2019 Klaus Armingeon, Sarah Engler and Lucas Leemann The Supplement to the Comparative Political Data Set provides detailed information on party composition, reshuffles, duration, reason for termination and on the type of government for 36 democratic OECD and/or EU-member countries. The data begins in 1959 for the 23 countries formerly included in the CPDS I, respectively, in 1966 for Malta, in 1976 for Cyprus, in 1990 for Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania and Slovakia, in 1991 for Poland, in 1992 for Estonia and Lithuania, in 1993 for Latvia and Slovenia and in 2000 for Croatia. In order to obtain information on both the change of ideological composition and the following gap between the new an old cabinet, the supplement contains alternative data for the year 1959. The government variables in the main Comparative Political Data Set are based upon the data presented in this supplement. When using data from this data set, please quote both the data set and, where appropriate, the original source. Please quote this data set as: Klaus Armingeon, Sarah Engler and Lucas Leemann. 2021. Supplement to the Comparative Political Data Set – Government Composition 1960-2019. Zurich: Institute of Political Science, University of Zurich. These (former) assistants have made major contributions to the dataset, without which CPDS would not exist. In chronological and descending order: Angela Odermatt, Virginia Wenger, Fiona Wiedemeier, Christian Isler, Laura Knöpfel, Sarah Engler, David Weisstanner, Panajotis Potolidis, Marlène Gerber, Philipp Leimgruber, Michelle Beyeler, and Sarah Menegal.
    [Show full text]
  • Appendix 1A: List of Government Parties September 12, 2016
    Updating the Party Government data set‡ Public Release Version 2.0 Appendix 1a: List of Government Parties September 12, 2016 Katsunori Seki§ Laron K. Williams¶ ‡If you use this data set, please cite: Seki, Katsunori and Laron K. Williams. 2014. “Updating the Party Government Data Set.” Electoral Studies. 34: 270–279. §Collaborative Research Center SFB 884, University of Mannheim; [email protected] ¶Department of Political Science, University of Missouri; [email protected] List of Government Parties Notes: This appendix presents the list of government parties that appear in “Data Set 1: Governments.” Since the purpose of this appendix is to list parties that were in government, no information is provided for parties that have never been in government in our sample (i.e, opposition parties). This is an updated and revised list of government parties and their ideological position that were first provided by WKB (2011). Therefore, countries that did not appear in WKB (2011) have no list of government parties in this update. Those countries include Bangladesh, Botswana, Czechoslovakia, Guyana, Jamaica, Namibia, Pakistan, South Africa, and Sri Lanka. For some countries in which new parties are frequently formed and/or political parties are frequently dissolved, we noted the year (and month) in which a political party was established. Note that this was done in order to facilitate our data collection, and therefore that information is not comprehensive. 2 Australia List of Governing Parties Australian Labor Party ALP Country Party
    [Show full text]
  • Russian and Serbian Minorities After Secession
    ETHNIC POLITICS IN NEW STATES: RUSSIAN AND SERBIAN MINORITIES AFTER SECESSION Anna Batta Dissertation Prepared for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS May 2013 APPROVED: Idean Salehyan, Major Professor John Ishiyama, Co-Major Professor T. David Mason, Committee Member Steven Forde, Committee Member Richard Ruderman, Chair of the Department of Political Science Mark Wardell, Dean of the Toulouse Graduate School Batta, Anna. Ethnic Politics in New States: Russian and Serbian Minorities after Secession. Doctor of Philosophy (Political Science), May 2013, 295 pp., 22 tables, 15 figures, 234 titles. New states are often born in a volatile environment, in which the survival of the new country is uncertain. While analysis of the nationalizing new governments exists, research focuses mainly on domestic politics. I argue that the treatment of minority that remains in the new states is a function of the interaction of the dual threat posed by the minority itself domestically on one hand and the international threat coming from the mother state to protect its kin abroad on the other hand. Specifically, I argue that there is a curvilinear relationship between domestic and international threat and the extent of discrimination against the politically relevant minority. Most discrimination takes place when domestic and international threats are moderate because in this case there is a balance of power between the government, the minority, and the rump state. With time-series-cross-sectional (TSCS) data analysis this dissertation systematically tests the treatment of Russian and Serbian minorities in all post-Soviet and post-Yugoslav states between 1991 and 2006 and finds statistically significant results for the curvilinear hypothesis.
    [Show full text]
  • Manifesto Project Dataset List of Political Parties
    Manifesto Project Dataset List of Political Parties [email protected] Website: https://manifesto-project.wzb.eu/ Version 2020a from July 22, 2020 Manifesto Project Dataset - List of Political Parties Version 2020a 1 Coverage of the Dataset including Party Splits and Merges The following list documents the parties that were coded at a specific election. The list includes the name of the party or alliance in the original language and in English, the party/alliance abbreviation as well as the corresponding party identification number. In the case of an alliance, it also documents the member parties it comprises. Within the list of alliance members, parties are represented only by their id and abbreviation if they are also part of the general party list. If the composition of an alliance has changed between elections this change is reported as well. Furthermore, the list records renames of parties and alliances. It shows whether a party has split from another party or a number of parties has merged and indicates the name (and if existing the id) of this split or merger parties. In the past there have been a few cases where an alliance manifesto was coded instead of a party manifesto but without assigning the alliance a new party id. Instead, the alliance manifesto appeared under the party id of the main party within that alliance. In such cases the list displays the information for which election an alliance manifesto was coded as well as the name and members of this alliance. 2 Albania ID Covering Abbrev Parties No. Elections
    [Show full text]
  • Russian Community” As a Means of Self-Identification of Russians in Latvia
    SECTION III: MINORITY INTERGRATION The “Russian Community” as a Means of Self-identification of Russians in Latvia Vladislav Volkov 1. Introduction After Latvians, Russians are the largest ethnic group in Latvia: thus, in 2008 Latvians comprised 59.2% of the country's population (1.345 million out of 2.276 million), and Russians comprised 28.0% (0.638 million). (Latvia, 2009, 1). Russians as ethnic minority differ from other ethnic minorities in Latvia – the Byelorussians, the Ukrainians, the Lithuanians, the Poles, the Jews, etc. – in numbers as well as in qualitative characteristics when organizing their own socio-cultural infrastructure. The population of the Latvian Russians outnumbers more than twice the corresponding number of all the other ethnic minorities in Latvia taken together. The proportion of the Russian population within the structure of the population of Latvia is the most important factor that influences formation of this ethnic minority’s identity. Besides the ethno-demographic factor, the identity of Russians in Latvia is formed under the influence of their socio- cultural and public-political life as well as some forms of social communi- cation. Unlike other ethnic minorities, the Latvian Russians during the years of the restored Latvian Republic since 1991 have managed to create a socio- cultural infrastructure on the basis of their mother tongue. This socio- cultural infrastructure involves wide spread of the Russian language in the sphere of Latvian entrepreneurship, in the system of private education (including higher education), in the sphere of entertainment and mass media. One part of the professional culture in Latvia also functions in the Russian language (the oldest outside Russia, Riga’s M.
    [Show full text]
  • 100Inriga 20190516 210X230.Pdf
    INDEX Introduction to Riga 4 Symbols of Riga 6 Architecture 16 Interesting Neighbourhoods 30 Nature 41 Art and Culture Institutions 52 Restaurants, Bars and Cafes 64 Fashion and Design 78 Active Lifestyle 87 Untraditional Viewpoints 94 Legendary Rigans 102 INTRODUCTION TO RIGA Do you know what’s the one Historically, Riga has always been Today, Riga is a cradle for question about Riga visitors to a crossroads, a melting pot of innovative start-ups, and it prides the city most often ask? No, it’s various nations and cultures. But itself in an excellent music and not about the current economic the unique patina in this city of contemporary art scene, the Song situation or what time of year is more than 600,000 inhabitants Festival (which culminates in an best to visit Riga. In fact, it’s more has in large part also been formed open-air concert with 18,000 of an observation than a question: by the proximity of water – the choir singers) and a dynamic ”It feels like Riga is bubbling Daugava River and the Gulf of gastronomy milieu, in which local over with life and has become Riga. chefs compete in their search for something like the creative ”the flavour of Latvia” and thus epicentre of the Baltics. There’s The city has always lived in close bring an appreciative smile to the so much going on, especially in cooperation with nature, which face of many a gourmet traveller. culture. Why exactly Riga, and is still an important part of its why right now?” residents’ daily lives – the many Riga has a glamorous city centre public parks, forests, squares, as well as a hipster republic.
    [Show full text]
  • 1112052017.Pdf
    1 VII Starptautiskās jauno pētnieku un studentu zinātniski praktiskās konferences“Izaicinājumu un iespēju laiks: problēmas, risinājumi, perspektīvas”rakstu krājumā apkopoti studentu, maģistrantu, doktorantu, maģistru un doktoru konferencē nolasīties referāti. Konferencē piedalījās referenti no Latvijas, Polijas, Krievijas, Baltkrievijas, Ukrainas, Kazahstānas, Tūrcija, Ēģiptes. Krājumā iekļauti 74 referentu 94 raksti, kuros iztirzāta ekonomikas, uzņēmējdarbības, finanšu, tiesību zinātnes, pedagoģijas, psiholoģijas, kulturoloģijas, filoloģijas, mākslas un dizaina problemātika.– Rīga: BSA, 2017. – 286 lpp. Konferences organizatoriskā komitēja: Staņislavs Buka, Dr.oec., asoc.prof. – Baltijas Starptautiskā akadēmija, Latvija; Inna Stecenko, Dr.oec., prof. – Baltijas Starptautiskā akadēmija, Latvija; Zdenek Sadovsky, PhD in Economics, Associate Professor. – STING ACADEMY, Czech Republic; Kuznetsova Anzhela, Dr.phil.,prof.–Banking University of Ukraine (Kyiv), Ukraine; Jacek Zieliński, professor, Dr.hab.sc. pol. – Higher School of. Social administration, Polija; Stanislav Knyazev, Dr.iur., prof. – International University "MITSO" (Republic of Belarus); Vera Amosova, PhD in Economics. – Saint-Petersburg State University, Russia. Zinātniskā un redakcijas kolēģija: Inna Stecenko, Dr.oec., prof. – Baltijas Starptautiskā akadēmija, Latvija; Irina Plotka, Dr.psych., prof. – Baltijas psiholoģijas un menedžmenta augstskola, Latvija; Larisa Ignatjeva, Dr.paed, prof. – Baltijas Starptautiskā akadēmija, Latvija; Marina Sumbarova, Dr.iur., asoc.prof. –
    [Show full text]
  • The Influence of Party Competition on Minority Politics: a Comparison of Latvia and Estonia
    Journal on Ethnopolitics and Minority Issues in Europe Vol 13, No 1, 2014, 57-85 Copyright © ECMI 2014 This article is located at: http://www.ecmi.de/fileadmin/downloads/publications/JEMIE/2014/Nakai.pdf The Influence of Party Competition on Minority Politics: A Comparison of Latvia and Estonia Ryo Nakai* Rikkyo University The aim of the research presented in this article is to highlight differences in inter-ethnic political relations on minority issues in Latvia and Estonia, and how the varied structures of their political party competitions have affected the ethno- political landscapes of the two countries. Though Estonia and Latvia had similar starting points with their respective minority questions, the political elites in both republics have demonstrated different responses to this issue, and inter-ethnic political relations in Latvia and Estonia have demonstrated divergent paths. While the citizenship and language laws of Latvia adopted or amended by majority parties are still restrictive, those of Estonia are relatively less so. The Russophone minorities in Latvia have intensified their support for ethnic parties, while in Estonia no ethnic party currently has any seats in the national parliament. Moreover, Russophone residents in Latvia organize political rallies or movements more often than in Estonia. The party systems of Latvia and Estonia are significantly important as an explanatory factor for this variance. Under the fragmented party system in Latvia, ethnic majorities’ political elites exploit ethnic issues to mobilize support from Latvian voters and to win popularity over political rivals. This has generated spiralling dynamics of restrictive policies and political protests by Russian-speakers. In contrast, Estonian political elites function under a relatively consolidated party system and, instead, seek to incorporate Russophone voters to win elections.
    [Show full text]
  • Selecting Candidates for the EP Elections
    DIRECTORATE GENERAL FOR INTERNAL POLICIES POLICY DEPARTMENT C: CITIZENS' RIGHTS AND CONSTITUTIONAL AFFAIRS CONSTITUTIONAL AFFAIRS The Selection of Candidates for the European Parliament by National Parties and the Impact of European Political Parties STUDY Abstract This study compares the procedures applied by national political parties when they select their candidates for the European elections. It analyses the background in national law, the formal party statutes and the informal processes preparing the final selection. The report covers the calendar, selection criteria and structural characte- ristics of candidate nomination in the major political parties of the Member States, including the impact of European political parties. October 2009 PE 410.683 EN This document was requested by the European Parliament's Committee on Constitutional Affairs. The paper is published in English. AUTHORS Jean-Benoît Pilet, Cevipol, Université Libre de Bruxelles Rumyana Kolarova, Vladimir Shopov, Bulgarian EC Studies Association (BECSA) Mats Braun, Vít Beneš, Jan Karlas , Institute of International Relations, Prague Mette Buskjær Christensen, Ian Manners, Danish Inst. for International Studies Mathias Jopp, Tobias Heller, Jeannette Pabst, IEP, Berlin Piret Ehin, Institute of Government and Politics, University of Tartu. Antonis Papayannidis, Nikos Frangakis, Anna Vallianatou, Greek Centre of European Studies and Research Ignacio Molina, Elcano Royal Institute of International Studies, Madrid Olivier Rozenberg, Centre de recherches politiques, Sciences Po, Paris Joseph Curtin, IIEA, Dublin Giulia Sandri, Cevipol, Université Libre de Bruxelles Achilles C. Emilianides, Christina Ioannou, Giorgos Kentas, Centre for Scientific Dialogue and Research, Cyprus Toms Rostoks, Veiko Spolītis, Latvian Institute of International Affairs Gabriella Ilonszki, Réka Várnagy, Corvinus University, Budapest Eva Huijbregts, Nel van Dijk, Institute for Political Participation, Amsterdam Nieves E.
    [Show full text]