Tetyana Malyarenko, Donetsk State University of Management, Donetsk, Ukraine
E-mail:[email protected]
Stefan Wolff, Department of Political Science and International Studies, University of Birmingham, UK
E-mail:[email protected]
Dr David J. Galbreath, University of Bath, Politics, Languages and International Studies, United Kingdom
E-mail: [email protected]
NISPAcee Project Manager:
Viera Wallnerova, E-mail: [email protected]
The newly-established NISPAcee Working Group ‘Working Group on Good Governance, Human Rights and Development in Weak, Crisis and Post-conflict States’ has been officially approved for the 20th Annual Conference of NISPAcee in Ohrid.
Call for Paper Proposals 2012
Human rights and development both aim to promote
well-being and freedom, based on the inherent dignity and equality of all
people. Applying human rights based approach to development will enable
governments to enhance the effectiveness of their work through a focus on
equality and non-discrimination, accountability, justice, and transparency as
the core of human development.
Yet, while the implementation of human rights standards
and international human rights mechanisms in the decision-making processes at
all levels of public governance is generally acknowledged as a priority for public
management reforms in weak, crisis and post-conflict states, including in the
post-Soviet region, the links between human rights, good governance and
economic development, in particular at the local level, and the relationship between
human rights and the Millennium Development Goals remain not properly
understood and, thus, underexplored. This means that new and important issues,
such as state failure or the links between social exclusion, discrimination and
poverty are not systematically studied either. Partly, this might be explained
with higher priorities by international and national human rights organizations
during the first decade of the reforms, who focused their efforts on adoption
of human rights standards in the legislation of post-Soviet countries and THE ratification
of key international documents, such as the European Convention on Human
Rights, European Charter for Regional and Minority Languages, etc. At the same
time, there has been growing understanding of the links among human rights, effective
governance and economic development whereas issues such as justice, accountability,
poverty reduction, employment, social inclusion, non-discrimination, public
health, conflict prevention, women and children are fundamental concern of
local development.
Against this background, the proposed Working Group invites papers in four inter-related thematic areas:
(1) in-depth analysis of how human rights frameworks affect conditions for effective governance and economic development in the post-Soviet states;
(2) the mechanisms for mainstreaming good governance practices and human rights standards into local development programs;
(3) effective policies to realize the potential of good governance for people-oriented economic development; and
(4) best practices of research-led teaching on good
governance in higher education institutions.
The Working Group is open, and indeed welcomes,
interdisciplinary and multi-method papers covering a wide range of different
approaches from single-sector and cross-sectoral policy analyses to single and
comparative case studies. Papers may focus on, among others, public policies
and strategies through which human rights strengthen efforts to achieve economic
development goals; good governance practices in CEE and the CIS countries, establishing
the promotion of justice, accountability and transparency, generating public
participation and responding to key challenges for human rights and economic
development, such as corruption and violent conflict; or national approaches in
different spheres of developments and/or aspects of good governance in terms of
the guidance they take from public policy and the role human rights play in
policy formulation and implementation.
Professor Tetyana Malyarenko
Donetsk State University of Management, Donetsk Ukraine
Tetyana Malyarenko is professor at the Faculty of Law and Social
Sciences, Donetsk State University of Management, Ukraine and also
Erasmus Mundus visiting professor at the Human Rights Practice
Consortium. Dr. Malyarenko is an expert for the Ukrainian Helsinki Human
Rights Union and public policy expert at the Council of National
Security and Defence of Ukraine. She holds a Candidate of Science Degree
in Economics (Ph.D.) from National University of Economics and Trade
and a Doctor of Science Degree in Public Governance from Donetsk State
University of Management (Topic: "Preventing Social Conflict: The
Mechanisms of Public Governance and Security of the State”). Her
principle research interests include societal and economic aspects of
security in transition states, human security and good governance,
social conflicts and civil wars. Current research projects are about
regional dynamics, inequality and public policy, human rights and good
governance in the security sector, and economic security and the
European security order.
Professor Stefan Wolff
Department of Political Science and International Studies
University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom
Stefan Wolff is Professor of International Security at the University of Birmingham. He specialises in the management of contemporary security challenges and has written extensively on ethnic conflict, international conflict management and state-building. Among his 12 books to date are Ethnic Conflict: A Global Perspective (Oxford University Press 2006, 2nd ed. 2007), Institutions for the Management of Ethnopolitical Conflict in Central and Eastern Europe (Council of Europe 2008, with Marc Weller), and Ethnic Conflict: Causes-Consequences-Responses (Polity 2009, with Karl Cordell).
Wolff is the founding editor of the journal Ethnopolitics and an associate editor of Civil Wars. He is frequently consulting to governments and international organisations on conflict resolution issues, especially on questions of negotiation strategy and constitutional design. He is currently working in an advisory capacity on the Transnistria conflict in Moldova.
Wolff is a graduate of the University of Leipzig, the University of Cambridge, and the London School of Economics and Political Science.
Dr David J. Galbreath
University of Bath, Politics, Languages and International Studies, United Kingdom
Dr David J. Galbreath is Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations, University of Bath, UK. Before coming to Bath, he was lecturer and senior lecturer at the University of Aberdeen in the Department of Politics and International Relations.
Dr Galbreath is an Honorary Senior Research Fellow in the School of Social Science at the University of Aberdeen and a non-resident Senior Research Associate at the European Centre for Minority Issues in Flensburg, Germany. He has worked with the US State Department, the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the UK House of Commons Defence Select Committee. He is the Editor-in-Chief of European Security.
PLEASE NOTE THAT THE DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION FOR THIS WG WAS NOVEMBER 15, 2011.