You may wish to read below the statement of the Budapest Centre appealing for the launch of a mediation and dialogue process on the aggression in Ukraine. Your "like" would greatly help us see the support of the suggestion. Please feel free to share it within your network.
In the framework of the Dialogue Platform, the Budapest Centre for Mass Atrocities Prevention is proud and pleased to share the first episode of its series of interviews with scholars and practitioners from all over the world who will provide different views on various aspects of mass atrocities prevention from a regional perspective.
In this first instalment, we talk about the conflict between universal human rights and values and cultural relativism with our first guest, Dr István Lakatos, who has been working in the field of human rights diplomacy for about three decades and is currently acting as the human rights advisor in the Ministry of Justice, Human and Minority Rights of Montenegro. Dr. Lakatos has recently defended his PhD thesis titled "Comparative human rights diplomacy in the shadow of the cultural relativism versus universalism debate: A case study of the UN Human Rights Council".
On the occasion of the 73rd anniversary of the adoption of the UN convention on genocide prevention, the Budapest Centre for Mass Atrocities Prevention would like to share the article written by Dr. Gyorgy Tatar, Chair of the Budapest Centre, to commemorate the historical event and to stress the importance and urgency to intensify fight against hate.
The Budapest Centre for Mass Atrocities Prevention would like to share the unofficial translation of the article By Dialogue Against Hate, written and posted by Gyorgy Tatar, Chair of the Budapest Centre, in his private Facebook page on 23 November, 2021.
The Budapest Centre for Mass Atrocities Prevention is proud to share the interview to Dr. Gyorgy Tatar, the Director of the Centre and Chair of the Board of Trustees, at the 2021 EFUS conference on Security, Democracy and Cities.
We invite you to take a look at the interview here.
The Budapest Centre calls your attention to the newly published EPLO statement on The European Peace Facility: Minimising Significant Risks in Implementation.