Previous|Title|Next
5 Objectives of the Proposed New Human
Rights Policy
The preceding parts of this article
have briefly assessed the EU's existing approach to human rights and
examined some of the factors that underscore the need for a new human rights
policy. Before developing specific policy proposals it is instructive to begin
by clarifying the objectives that such a policy should be designed to meet.
Without going into the specific details,
which are developed later in this analysis, the following should be the
principal characteristics of a new policy:
- Acceptance of the fact that there is a
need for a comprehensive and coherent EU human rights policy based on a
clarification of the constitutional ambiguity which currently bedevils any
discussion of Community action in this field;
- The development of more consistent
linkages between internal and external policies and the promotion of greater
interaction and complementarity between the two levels;
- The establishment of detailed,
systematic and reliable information bases upon which the various actors
(including Member States, the Commission, the Council, the European Parliament
and civil society) can construct integrated, calibrated, transparent and
effective policies;
- The development of a pool of
knowledgeable and experienced personnel with the necessary technical and
policy-making expertise in human rights, thereby overcoming the current
dispersion of human and financial resources, especially within the
Commission;
- The promotion of more effective
coordination among the many Community actions, programmes and initiatives
already being undertaken in the field of human rights by different Commission
services so as to achieve a more coherent whole and so as to prevent
duplication in this field;
- Changing the human rights culture of the
Community legislative and administrative apparatus - in the way that has to
some extent now been achieved in the field of environmental protection and,
more recently, in relation to subsidiarity;
- The elaboration of policy approaches
which bring the human rights dimensions of action under each of the three
Pillars into closer alignment, while respecting the key differences in terms of
Community competence, financing and decision-making processes;
- Enabling the European Parliament to play
a more effective role in shaping human rights policy through giving it greater
and more assured access to reliable information and enhanced opportunities to
interact constructively with the Council and Commission;
- Increasing the accessibility of existing
avenues for judicial vindication of human rights both through national courts
and through the European Court of Justice, as well as through the development
of the new judicial opportunities provided for in the Amsterdam treaty;
- The identification of new policy options
designed to ensure that the culture and methodology of human rights are able to
adapt and respond to the needs of a rapidly changing political and economic
environment;
- Creating opportunities for more
sustained consultation with non-governmental organizations, as well as civil
society in its broadest sense, in all aspects of EU policy-making and, where
feasible, in the implementation of those policies;
- Strengthening the coherence and unity of
external human rights policies through the development of more principled,
predictable and transparent procedures and criteria in relation to aid and its
suspension;
- Ensuring a more effective EU role in
influencing, shaping and acting as a catalyst to achieve, where appropriate,
greater respect for human rights among some of the Union's interlocutors and
partners, including within multilateral fora;
- Facilitating a more principled and
consistent European policy in response to serious violations of human rights
among interlocutors and partners. Such a policy would also relate to third
countries which are not covered by the two new proposed Community
Regulations.
- Being in the vanguard of efforts to
provide effective and more assured flows of humanitarian assistance, combined
with an appropriate emphasis upon human rights;
- Supporting the work of other
international institutions, particularly that of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights, the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees, the Council of Europe and the OSCE.
Top Of Page|Previous|Title|Next