Preliminary Material /Asbjørn Eide , Jakob Th. Möller and Ineta Ziemele -- The Right to Peace Milestones in the Development of International Humanitarian Law /Daniel Thürer -- Post-War American International Law Scepticism: The International Criminal Court, Stockholm 1924 /Mark Weston Janis -- Peace as a Human Right: The Jus Cogens Prohibition of Aggression /Alfred de Zayas -- The Human Right to Peace /William A. Schabas -- Security and Human Rights in the Regulation of Private Military Companies: The Role of the Home State /Francesco Francioni -- The United Nations and Human Rights What Makes Democracy Good? /Lyal S. Sunga -- Is the United Nations Human Rights Council Living Up to the International Community's Expectations? /Markus G. Schmidt -- The UN Human Rights Council: The Perennial Struggle between Realism and Idealism /Bertrand G. Ramcharan -- Eight UN Petitions Procedures: A Comparative Analysis /Jakob Th. Möller -- The Legal Status of Views Adopted by the Human Rights Committee – From Genesis to Adoption of General Comment No. 33 /Geir Ulfstein -- Winter Break 2010: A Week in the Life of a Special Rapporteur /Martin Scheinin -- Legal and Judicial Shortcomings of the Surrogate State of "UNMIKISTAN" /Margrét Heinreksdóttir -- The Right to Inclusive Education for Children with Disabilities – Innovations in the CRPD /Arnardóttir Arnardóttir -- Human Rights at the Regional Level The Council of Europe: A Champion in Monitoring Implementation of Human Rights Standards? /Petter F. Wille -- Flexibilising the Modes of Amending the European Convention on Human Rights: An Idea for a 'Statute' for the European Court /Krzysztof Drzewicki -- Strengthening of the Principle of Subsidiarity of the European Convention on Human Rights /Björg Thorarensen -- Presumption of Convention Compliance /Davíð Þór Björgvinsson -- The Right to Adequate Judicial Reasoning /Ragnar Aðalsteinsson -- Dialogue Between States and International Human Rights Monitoring Organs – Especially the European Commission Against Racism and Intolerance /Lauri Hannikainen -- How Old Are You? Age Discrimination and EU Law /Allan Rosas -- NHRIs in the European Union: Status Quo Vadis? /Morten Kjærum and Jonas Grimheden -- Selected Examples of the Contemporary Practice of the Inter-American System in Confronting Grave Violations of Human Rights: United States and Colombia /Diego Rodríguez-Pinzón -- Indigenous Peoples and Minorities Prevention of Discrimination, Protection of Minorities, and the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: Challenges and Choices /Asbjørn Eide -- Minority Protection in the African System of Human Rights /Michelo Hansungule -- Indigenous Peoples on the International Scene: A Personal Reminiscence /Lee Swepston -- Indigenous Peoples and the Right to Development /Rainer Hofmann and Juri Alistair Gauthier -- Principal Problems Regarding Indigenous Land Rights and Recent Endeavours to Resolve Them /Erica-Irene A. Daes -- Traditional Knowledge of Indigenous Peoples: Preserve or Protect? – That's the Question! /Mpazi Sinjela -- Redefining Sovereignty and Self-Determination through a Declaration of Sovereignty: The Inuit Way of Defining the Parameters for Future Arctic Governance /Timo Koivurova.
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This collection of articles sheds light on the role of human language in interspecies interaction. The book shows that language is not necessarily what separates us from other creatures. It can also be seen as yet another dimension of human existence that is deeply rooted in our shared history and everyday life with other living beings. This volume contains six individual research articles, two short reviews, an opening introduction to the themes of the book, and an extensive, theoretical closing chapter. The studies draw on methodologies and theoretical approaches including conversation analysis and a cognitive, usage-based approach to grammatical constructions. The book further explores the interfaces of linguistics, biosemiotics, and posthumanism. The studies show how linguistic and interactional approaches can contribute to our understanding of how human and non-human animals communicate with each other during embodied activities, how human language users make sense of interspecies encounters in speaking to or about animals, and how human language is thereby impregnated by the presence of other species. The individual research articles study, e.g., interaction with co-present animals, dialectal cow calls, parliamentary speeches, narratives of nature observation, and historical laws.
This book [Mediatized power and the return of the political] describes Finnish decision-makers' relationship with the media. It is based on surveys in 2009 and 2019. In 2009 there were 419 and in 2019 484 respondents, all of them having an influential position in some of the eight societal sectors covered in the study. The results show a moderate change from a consensus-oriented and networking decision-making culture towards a more ideologic and power-based way of negotiating. However, it seems that this has not affected how open or transparent the negotiation-processes are or how prone the decision-makers are to leak confidential information. The decision-makers' relationship with media publicity has become more professional and strategic. The results point to an increased role of social media in communications management while the role of the news media seems to be diminishing. Even though the decision-makers view publicity as an even more risky and strategic arena of political struggle than they did before, they also seem now acknowledge more clearly the rational aspects of journalism. The self-reported role of media publicity as a source of personal authority has somewhat diminished while there seems to be no change in how prone the decision-makers think they are for the impacts of media publicity.
For the first time worldwide, this collection brings together analyses of the last two centuries of historical change around the shores and drainage basin of Lake Ladoga, Europe's largest lake. The main focus of the narrative is the Northern Ladoga region, which was a Finnish administrative area between 1812 and 1944. After the Second World War, the entire shoreline of Lake Ladoga was incorporated into the northeast part of Russia's border region, the Autonomous Republic of Karelia and the Leningrad Province. The main theme uniting this collection is how the relationship between humans and nature is shaped by industrialization and modernization in society. Other key issues include protecting nature and perspectives on particular places and times, which are reflected in the methodological and thematic choices made in this volume. The research framework set by the editor, Professor Maria Lähteenmäki, is the new lakefront history (Finn. uusi rantahistoria), focusing on approaches to environmental, economic and sensory history of lakes. To draw broad conclusions, on the one hand, the multilevel changes on the lakefront cannot be understood without knowledge of the history of the wider drainage basin, and awareness of the geopolitics of the region and the climate changes. On the other hand, the human relationship to natural waters has changed significantly in 200 years. Thinking in terms of economic benefit has gradually given way to principles of sustainable development. Lake Ladoga is also being redefined from a spatial perspective, as nationalist ownership of the region is coupled with global concern about the state of Europe's largest lake.
Michael Agricola's main work is the New Testament, published in 1548, a magnificent quarto volume of 700 pages with a hundred woodcuts. The basic text used was the Greek text published by Erasmus, Erasmus' Latin translation, the Vulgate, the Luther Bible and the Swedish Bible from 1541. The 450 marginal glosses come from the Luther Bible and the Swedish Bible. In his translation, Agricola distinguished "the Holy Spirit's own words," i.e. H. the Bible text, the prefaces and marginal glosses, which were only intended to provide "clearer understanding". The word of God is much more valuable than the word of man, so that the translator was closely tied to the text. A free translation was out of the question, let alone consciously improving the text. He was able to proceed more freely with the prefaces and marginal glosses. Most of the time he translated verbatim, but did not shy away from omissions, additions and changes when he deemed them appropriate. In this critical edition, Agricola's marginal glosses on the New Testament are printed in parallel with their sources.
Human lives are crucially shaped by encounters of otherness – or, rather, various othernesses. This book explores the ethical challenge of developing an appropriate and respectful relation to other human beings by analyzing a number of historical and cultural cases of relating to the other. The topics range from barbarism, racist stereotypes, female rhetoric, and vampires to philosophical analyses of Finnish writers like Eino Leino and Väinö Linna, and from lyrical depictions of pain to an "antitheodicist" reflection on Primo Levi's Holocaust writing. A chapter on what it means to take a critical distance to other human beings in the context of the covid-19 pandemic concludes the volume. The authors approach these diverse issues (which are all aspects of the same basic problem of understanding and acknowledging otherness) from the perspective of an interdisciplinary humanistic reflection integrating literary analysis and philosophical argumentation.
Participatory approaches and co-research are increasingly employed in the current moment for exploring barriers to equality. Co-research treats research participants as experts in their own lives and as equal research partners. Research conducted with this orientation is based on research problems drafted by the research participants themselves from their aspirations regarding the research process and an active partnership that considers the interests of all parties involved. Participatory methods are used in co-research, particularly for the purpose of deepening the contextualisation of research knowledge about structurally vulnerable or subordinated groups and to challenge the power positions associated with traditional research designs. In co-research, the role of the people involved in the research is more central than in more traditional research. One of the key principles of co-research is that co-investigators (a) can participate in various roles, (b) have the opportunity to participate in different phases of the research according to their own interests and resources, and (c) co-investigators' participation can take many forms, including differences in intensity. The idea is to provide more people with opportunities to contribute to the knowledge production about themselves and their communities from their respective perspectives and interests. Co-research is also seen as an opportunity to improve the relevance and usefulness of scientific knowledge. It aims to genuinely increase interaction and openness and extend science's societal responsibility. In this book, we approach co-research as a means to promote social justice, as an action with a societal impact contributor to social impact and as a means to promote the societal responsibility of science. We discuss and evaluate the ideals of the co-research process concerning the everyday challenges and practices in research. Above all, we offer the knowledge and experience generated by our own projects to support those planning or already implementing co-research projects.
Finnish Lapland is a historical borderland of Finnish and Sámi cultures. Such a region offers various social-political identifications for people to choose: people may see it possible to identify as Finnish, Laplanders, Lappish or Sámi, for instance. However, the choices have social and political limits, and some identifications are more contested than others. The book examines the processes of identifications in the middle parts of Lapland, just south of the region defined as Sámi homeland in Finland. While the study reveals differences and nuances in people's thinking, it also shows that there is a recognizable sense of shared cultural specifity around the region. Lapland is conceptualized as an extraordinary place with unusual nature and history, characterized by particular livelihoods (such as reindeer herding) and lively cultural interaction. The book concludes that while Lapland is extraordinary as a historical dwelling region of indigenous Sámi, it may be politically significant to recognize it as a unique borderland of cultures with features of its own.
Väitöskirjan tavoitteena on selvittää valtiontukisääntelyn ja sen tulkinnan yhteyttä EU:n politiikkaan sekä käytettyihin taloudellisiin ajattelutapoihin. Politiikan lisäksi väitöskirjassa tarkastellaan erityisesti tukikilpailuun liittyvän taloustieteellisen keskustelun vaikutusta valtiontukisääntelyyn. Lisäksi tavoitteena on selvittää, miten tavoitteet tosiasiassa ohjaavat valtiontukisääntelyn kehitystä ja miten nämä tavoitteet mahdollisesti kehittävät valtiontukisääntelyä tulevaisuudessa. Valtiontukipolitiikkaa harjoitetaan pääasiassa SEUT 170(3)(c) -artiklan nojalla. Artikla on poikkeus SEUT 107(1) -artiklan sisältämään laajaan valtiontukikieltoon. SEUT 107(3)(c) -artikla mahdollistaa sellaisten tukien myöntämisen, jotka tuottavat enemmän yhteistä etua kuin haittaavat kilpailua sisämarkkinoilla. EU:n tuomioistuin on vahvistanut, että Euroopan komissiolla on laaja harkintavalta arvioidessa, mitkä tuet täyttävät tämän artiklan edellytykset. Komissio onkin toteuttanut valtiontukipolitiikkaa pitkälti tämän artiklan soveltamisella. Väitöskirjassa on kolme tutkimuskysymystä. Ensimmäinen tutkimuskysymys on "Mitkä ovat olleet merkittävimmät valtiontukisääntelyyn vaikuttavat taustaolettamat ja tavoitteet?" Tutkimuskysymykseen vastataan tutkimuksen luvuissa 2, 3 ja 4, joissa käsitellään valtiontukisääntelyn taustalla vaikuttanutta politiikkaa, sääntelyn historiallista kehitystä sekä tukikilpailuun liittyvää tutkimusta. Merkittävin valtiontukisääntelyn tavoite on ollut estää jäsenvaltioiden välistä tukikilpailua, jonka on katsottu haittaavan kaikkia jäsenvaltioita. Taustaolettamana on ollut, että tukikilpailussa kaikki sisämarkkinoilla toimivat jäsenvaltiot häviävät, ja jos valtiontukipolitiikkaa ei säännellä, jäsenvaltiot tukevat yrityksiään, mikä johtaa tukikilpailuun. Toiseksi tavoitteeksi tukikilpailun estämisen rinnalle on 2000-luvun taitteessa noussut tavoite poistaa markkinahäiriöitä valtiontuilla. Näitä markkinahäiriötä ovat olleet mm. kasvihuonekaasupäästöihin liittyvät ulkoisvaikutukset ja finanssikriisi. 2010-luvulla valtiontukisääntelyn tavoitteena on ollut myös lisätä talouskasvua ja parantaa ympäristön tilaa. Näiden lisäksi valtiontukisääntelyä ja komission julkaisuja tarkastelemalla voidaan havaita yksi EU:n toimivaltaan kuulumaton valtiontukisääntelyn tavoite: jäsenvaltioiden varojen säästäminen. Toinen tutkimuskysymys on "Miten nämä [tavoitteet ja taustaolettamat] ovat historian saatossa näkyneet valtiontukisääntelyssä ja komission toiminnassa?". Tutkimuskysymykseen vastataan luvuissa 1.5, 3 ja 4, joissa käsitellään valtiontukisääntelyn historiaa osana EU:n historiaa sekä nykyisen sääntelyn tavoitteita ja muutoksia. Historiallisesti tukikilpailun estäminen on ollut voimakkaimmin näkyvä tavoite, sillä valtiontukipolitiikka ja sääntelyn tulkinta ovat kiristyneet koko EU:n historian ajan, ja Unionin tuomioistuin on katsonut yhä useampia tukia kielletyksi valtiontueksi. Myös komissio on jatkuvasti kiristänyt linjaansa katsoen yhä useampia tukia sisämarkkinoille soveltumattomaksi valtiontueksi. Viimeisin merkittävä kehitys on ollut erilaisiin verotukiin puuttuminen 2010-luvulla. Tämän lisäksi myös tavoitteet markkinahäiriön poistamisesta ja talouskasvun lisäämisestä ovat näkyneet sääntelyssä. Markkinahäiriön poistamisen nojalla komissio on sallinut valtavasti ympäristö- ja erityisesti energiatukia. Nämä tuet ovat nykyään suurin tukiryhmä EU:ssa. Talouskasvua taas on pyritty lisäämään sallimalla yhä useampien erilaisten talouskasvulle hyväksi katsottujen tukien myöntäminen, osittain jopa luopuen tavoitteesta estää tukikilpailua. Kolmas tutkimuskysymys on "Miten nykyiset ympäristö- ja energiatuet sopivat tähän kehitykseen ja voidaanko tukipolitiikan katsoa muuttuneen näiden vuoksi?". Tutkimustulosten perusteella ympäristö- ja energiatukiin liittyvä komission sääntely on pyrkinyt lisäämään näitä tukia. Tuet sopivat teoriassa hyvin valtiontukien systematiikkaan, koska sallitut tuet eivät vääristä kilpailua voimakkaasti, mutta ne lisäävät yhteistä etua ja samalla säästävät jäsenvaltioiden varoja turhalta tukemiselta. Tämä perustuu tosin pitkälti komission asettamaan teoreettiseen viitekehykseen ja ennalta määrättyihin päätöksentekosääntöihin ilman empiiristä tarkastelua. Loppulauseena voidaankin todeta, että valtiontukipolitiikka perustuu pitkälti ajatukseen, että jäsenvaltiot tukevat yrityksiään, jos se vain sallitaan. EU-tasolla tapahtuvien päätösten rahankäytöstä katsotaan olevan järkevämpiä kuin jäsenvaltioiden tasolla tapahtuvien päätösten. Tämän vuoksi valtiontukipolitiikka on perustunut siihen, että yhteisen hyvän mukaiset tuet sallitaan, ja jäsenvaltiot tukevat halutessaan. Tähän mennessä politiikka on ollut tehokasta, koska jäsenvaltiot käyttävät merkittävästi varoja sellaisten kohteiden tukemiseen, jotka on erikseen sallittu SEUT 107(3)(c) -artiklan nojalla. ; The goal of this thesis was to find out how state aid regulation and interpretation of the regulation are connected to EU policies and economic theories used to form said policies. In addition to studying the policies, the effects of economic theory related to subsidy competition is studied. The goal of this thesis is to find out how these policy goals affect state aid regulation and how these goals will affect state aid regulation in the future. The state aid policy is mostly based on TFEU article 107(3)(c). The article contains an exception to the broad state aid prohibition in TFEU article 107(1). TFEU article 107(3)(c) enables granting aids that facilitate economic development and common good more than it adversely affects trading conditions within the internal market. CJEU has stated that the European Commission has broad discretion when evaluating which aids meet the criteria set in TFEY article 107(3)(c). The commission has used this article to execute state aid policy in the EU. The thesis contains three research questions. The first research question is "What are the most significant presumptions and goals affecting state aid regulation?". This research question is answered in chapters 2, 3 and 4, which study the policies behind state aid regulation, the historical development of state aid regulation and the research related to the subsidy competition. The most significant goal for state aid regulation has been to prevent subsidy competition between member states, which has been seen to harm all member states. The presumption behind state aid regulation has been that in subsidy competition everybody loses, and that if national state aid policies are left unregulated, all member states will subsidy their companies, which will lead to subsidy competition. In the 2000s, another goal of the state aid regulation has been to use the state aids to prevent market failures. Market failures referred to in this goal are e.g. externalities related to greenhouse gases and financial crisis. In addition to these goals, one other goal of state aid regulation in the 2010s has been promoting economic growth and improving the environment. Additionally, one other state aid policy goal that is not within the EU jurisdiction can be derived from state aid regulation and the commission's publications: saving member states' public funds. The second research question is "How these [goals and presumptions] have affected state aid regulation and the commission's actions in history". This research question is answered in chapters 1.5, 3, and 4, which study state aid history within the EU history and the current regulation's goals, as well as changes in current legislation. Historically, the most significant goal has been preventing subsidy competition; the state aid policy and the interpretation of the regulation have become more and more strict during the whole history of the EU. In addition to this, CJEU has deemed more and more aids incompatible with the internal market. The commission has continuously tightened its decisions and deemed more and more aids incompatible with the internal market, the last significant change being the state aid decisions regarding different tax measures in the 2010s. In addition to this, goals to remove market failure and to promote growth have influenced the regulation and its interpretation. In order to remove market failures, the commission has allowed significant subsidy programs for environment and renewable energy. These subsidies are currently the largest subsidy group in the EU. Economic growth has been promoted by allowing more and more different aids that are seen beneficial to growth, even partially abandoning the goal to prevent subsidy competition. The third research question is "How are the current environmental and energy aids suited for this development and is the subsidy policy changed due to this development". Results show that the commission regulation related to environmental and energy aids is designed to increase the amount of these aids. These aids are theoretically aligned with the state aid system, because the allowed aids do not significantly disturb competition, but they promote common good and simultaneously save public funds from useless subsiding. This conclusion is mostly based on theoretical framework and predetermined decision-making rules without any empirical evaluation. As a conclusion, it can be stated that the state aid policy is mostly based on the idea that member states will grant aids if it is allowed. Additionally, it is also based on the idea that the financial decision-making is better on the EU level than on the national level. In result, the basis of the state aid policy has been that aids beneficial to common good are allowed, and it is up to the member states to grant the aids if they want to. This policy has been effective because member states have been using significant amounts of funding to the goals allowed in TFEU article 107(3)(c).
Väitöstutkimus analysoi julkisia poliittisia performansseja poliittisena viestintänä. Poliittiset performanssit voidaan ymmärtää julkisissa tiloissa toimeen pantuina 'näytöksinä', joiden tavoitteena on luoda arkisiin rutiineihin yllättäviä katkoksia ja synnyttää uutta toimintatilaa jonkin yhteiskunnallisen ongelman esiin nostamiseksi. Performanssit synnyttävät katkoksia monin tavoin, mutta erityisen leimallista niille on näkyvän, vallalla olevan visuaalisen järjestyksen murtaminen tuomalla siihen erilaisia 'häiritseviä' (disruptive) elementtejä: resistoivia kehoja, valtaa parodioivia kuvia, karnevalistista protestointia, katuteatteria jne. Poliittisten performanssien viestintä perustuu puheen sijaan tai ohella toimijoiden oman kehon ja sen kantamien erilaisten visuaalisten merkkien julkiseen esittämiseen, joskus hyvin äärimmäisellä tavalla, kuten esimerkiksi nälkälakoissa ja polttoitsemurhissa. Väitöskirjassa tällaista viestintätyyliä kutsutaan visuaaliseksi ja esteettiseksi politikoinniksi. Tutkimuksessa analysoidaan useita esimerkkejä performatiivisesta poliittisesta viestinnästä ja kehitetään teoreettisia ideoita sen ominaispiirteiden tulkitsemiseksi. ; In this doctoral thesis I study a phenomenon which I have titled as public political performance. By public political performance I refer to a public event (a 'show', display, demonstration) the purpose of which is to expose in public and challenge those social-political norms, practices, and relations of power which usually remain invisible in the sway of routine political life. I am interested especially in how performance works as a form of non-linguistic, or wider than linguistic, political communication. I theorize and analyze, through several illustrative examples, performances from three perspectives: as corporeal (bodily), visual, and aesthetic communication. In construction of theory I use and partly rework ideas from thinkers such as Jürgen Habermas, Michel Foucault, Hannah Arendt, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and Jacques Ranciere. The study shows that public political performance is a sensitive, even volatile phenomenon because it often manifestly exposes the fundamentally violent power structure of society – as when, for example, street demonstrations induce strong counter reactions from the police and political authorities – and puts this order under critical public scrutiny. Political authorities do not take such challenges lightly, which is why public performances sometimes instigate serious political controversies. The key theoretical ideas of the study relate to performance as something done and en/acted. On the one hand, performance discloses the nature of politics as a 'doing.' This means in simple terms that, in order to subsist, the political world needs to be done, performed, and 'iterated,' every time anew. The term performative describes this social-constructivist side of politics. That the constitution of the social and political power is based not on any 'natural' ground but on continuous re/iteration of certain ways and routines is often revealed only when it is visibly and noticeably disrupted. This is what political performance typically does. On the other hand, performance signifies a particular kind of public show which resembles but does not equal theatrical shows. Performance is theatrical in being an 'art-like' communicative act, yet it is more surprising and unpredictable compared to regular theatre and, because of this, usually more difficult to approach and interpret. Political performance as a contingent and sometimes oddly appearing public event with a surprise effect brings forth the importance of disruption for politics. It alerts us to situations where the normalized political performatives are being visibly questioned by bringing into public space – 'in your face' – diverse disrupting elements like resisting bodies, parodying images, and carnevalism. The relationship between these two, performatives and performances, creates an edgy and 'chiasmatic' political space from which much of political life gains its driving force. This basic idea and relationship constitute the key starting point for this study's theoretical reflections. Political performance is an important subject for political studies for several reasons. The purely knowledge-based reason is that that in directing attention to the corporeal and visual aspects of politics and political communication, performance brings into view phenomena and conceptual possibilities which are too often ignored by political researchers and theorists. The relevance of performance for the field can also be justified from another perspective, through reference to its political and democratic significance. The discussions and analyses carried out in the study show that there are political circumstances where citizens see public performance as the only available means of participation in political communication, with other channels of communication forbidden or marginalized. There are also situations where citizens create, through setting up a performance, space for public communication and action where it has not existed before. Political performance as a way of contesting existing political realities can therefore have special value for political freedom. Political and democratic theory needs to understand, I shall argue, also that category of political action which performs political freedom rather than asks for it.