SETA KONFERANS Oturum Başkanı: Hatem Ete, SETA Konuşmacılar: Jan Egeland, İnsan Hakları İzleme Örgütü Joe Stork, İnsan Hakları İzleme Örgütü Tarih: 25 Ekim 2011 Salı Saat: 11.00-13.00 Yer: SETA, Ankara Salonu
ADALET ve HESAP VEREBİLİRLİK ARAYIŞI: HAK İHLALLERİ ve ARAP İSYANLARI
Bugün Orta Doğu ve Kuzey Afrika’da meydana gelen gelişmeler, farklılığın olduğu bir bölgenin tamamında insan hakları ve demokratikleşme için baskı kurulması konusunda benzeri görülmemiş bir fırsat sunuyor. Tunus’tan Bahreyn’e kadar olan bölgede daha fazla özgürlük ve demokrasi için ortaya çıkan talep, uzun yıllar süren gayrimeşrubaskı rejimlerinin ve otoriter yönetimlerin sona ermesi ya da reformları desteklemesi yönünde bir değişim imkânı sunuyor. İnsan haklarının kurulacak siyasi düzenin merkezinde önemli bir yer teşkil etmesini sağlamak için, bölgedeki yeni rejimlerin ve muhalif hareketlerin,hâlihazırda işledikleri ya da gelecekte işleyebilecekleri ihlaller karşısında sorumlu tutulmalarıson derece önemlidir.
SETA, göstericilere karşı acımasız önlemlere son vermesi için yapılan çağrılara kulaklarını tıkayan Suriye gibi rejimleri etkilemek ve insan haklarını desteklemek için yapılan girişimleri ve dış politika oluşumunda insan haklarının yerini/rolünü tartışmak üzere, alanında uzman iki saygın konuşmacının yer aldığı bir konferans düzenlemektedir.
İnsan Hakları İzleme Örgütü’nden Jan EgelandveJoe Stork’unkonuşmacı olarak yer aldığı konferansa davetlisiniz.
LCV için [email protected]
+ 90 312 551 21 66
Not: Konferansın dili İngilizce olacak, ancak, Türkçe simultane tercüme hizmeti verilecektir.
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PUBLICLECTURESEEKING JUSTICE and ACCOUNTABILITY: RIGHTS ABUSES AND THE ARAB UPRISINGS
Date/Time: October 25, 2011 Tuesday / 11.00-13.00 pm
Venue: SETA, Ankara Hall, ANKARA
Chair: YılmazEnsaroğlu,Director, SETALaw & Human Rights Research
Speakers: Jan Egeland, Deputy Executive Director,Human Rights Watch, Europe
Joe Stork,Deputy Director, Human Rights Watch, Middle East and North Africa
The upheavals and transformations in the Middle East and North Africa today offer an unprecedented opportunity to press for human rights and democratization across a region of great diversity. From Tunisia to Bahrain, the popular impulse for greater freedom and democracy offers the chance to end many years of authoritarian rule and press regimes lacking legitimacy or support to reform or die. One important way to make respect for rights central to the process of political transformation is to demand that state officials are held accountable for violations such as torture, arbitrary arrest and killings against their own populations. In order to demonstrate that human rights will be central to the new political order, it will be equally important to hold new regimes across the region and opposition movements accountable for violations they may commit in the future or have already committed.
SETA will arrange a public lecture to discuss human rights in foreign policy making, and efforts to advocate for human rights and influence regimes like that in Syria which has turned a deaf ear to calls to end the brutal clampdown on demonstrators. Two distinguished persons, Joe Stork and Jan Egeland, which are experts on human rights, Middle East and situations of emergency, humanitarian crisis and conflict resolution, will be the speakers of public lecture.
SETA invites you to attend a public lecture by Joe Storkand Jan Egelandof Human Rights Watch. We very much hope you will be able to attend this special public lecture.
Sincerely,
SETA Foundation for Political, Economic and Social Research
Please kindly RSVP to [email protected]
+ 90 312 551 21 66
Note: Public lecture will be held in English with simultaneous translation to Turkish.
Jan Egeland
Jan Egeland serves as Human Rights Watch’s deputy executive director of Europe. Prior to joining Human Rights Watch, he was the executive director of the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs. As UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and as UN Emergency Relief Coordinator from 2003 to 2006, Egeland helped reform the global humanitarian response system and organized the international response to the Asian Tsunami, and for crises from Darfur to the Democratic Republic of Congo to Lebanon. In 2006, Time magazine named him one of the 100 “people who shape our world.” From 1999 to 2002, he was the UN Secretary-General’s Special Adviser on Colombia, and from 1990 to 1997 he served as state secretary in the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He has substantial experience in the field of humanitarian relief and conflict resolution through his work at the United Nations, the International Red Cross and Red Crescent, the Norwegian Government, and other nongovernmental organizations. Egeland also currently holds a position as an associate professor at the University of Stavanger.
Joe Stork
Joe Stork, deputy director of Human Rights Watch's Middle East and North Africa division, is a general expert on human rights issues in the region. Before joining Human Rights Watch in 1996, Stork co-founded the Middle East Research & Information Project (MERIP) and served as chief editor of Middle East Report, its bimonthly magazine. Author of numerous books and widely published articles on the Middle East, he has lectured widely at universities and public forums around the world. Stork served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Turkey and holds an M.A. in International Affairs/Middle East Studies from Columbia University.