Untitled-1
YEAR IX. 2003
altera 22-23
Contents
Editorial - 3
DESCENTRALIZATION POLITICS AND
REGIONAL
AUTONOMY
Michal
Illner
Decentralization
Reforms in Three East Central European
Candidate Countries
– The Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland - 5
The comparative study of the renown Czech political
scientist sets off from the presupposition that the three countries, belonging to the same sub-region, share
similar
historical legacies as well as common legacies of the communist past,
they have faced
similar
transformation tasks after 1989 and have applied as the “first wave“ countries for EU membership. Their different geographies and histories, including
the
different national brands of communism,
different circumstances of exiting from communism, and also the divergent
elements of their political and social systems as well
as of their cultures, account for the differences between the three
countries, their
comparative analyse being, therefore, extremely useful to other countries that
are
undergoing a similar democratization process. The author concludes that the
main
job of overhauling the soviet-type subnational government has been done and in
all
these three countries there are now in
place comprehensive structures of a multilevel
subnational government, which will have to be perfected
Gyula
Horváth
A Comparative Study
on the Regional Policies of Hungary,
Bulgaria and Romania - 36
This comparative analysis of three countries that have
just left the planned economy
and that belonged to the same ideology for four decades and, partially, to the
same
alliance, but
among which differences prevail, can provide a deeper insight on the
differences between their regional policies during the transition period. This
very
technical study of the prestigious
Hungarian expert avoids any possible politicized
interpretations since it has been drawn up only from the pragmatic perspective
of the
accession to the EU. The case study on the Szeklar Land brings forward
the rich
diversity of the possible regional policies for the territory concerned. In his
conclusion, the author stresses that, despite their resemblance in the changes made
to the
territorial structure of the three
countries, their different responses given to the challenges posed by the regional development and their diversity in the
results of the development show that the “East-European bloc” is at least as
heterogeneous as the
EU. This
truth must be considered within the structural political reforms of the EU.
Andreas
Gross
Positive Experiences
of Autonomous Regions as a Source
of Inspiration for
Conflict Resolution in Europe - 47
The
report here by the Swiss MP Andreas Gross, presented to the Council of Europe
and resulting in Recommendation 1690 and Resolution 1334, is the outcome of
several years of minute research carried out
in “delicate” or “hot” regions of the world
and turns out to be a genuine
scientific study. Besides the analyse of the developments,
forms, legal framework etc. of the concept of autonomy the author puts forward
a rich
variety of case studies and reaches the conclusion that, acting upon the
principle of
subsidiarity regional autonomies, including
those comprising of the territories inhabited by minorities, even if not a panacea, are positive models for
domestic conflict
resolution. “The creation of such a
European legal instrument, which would encourage the promotion of the common principles of regional autonomy, would help
European states confronted with internal
conflicts to find constitutional solutions that would
enable them to preserve their
sovereignty and territorial integrity while respecting the
rights of ethnic minorities.”
DOCUMENT
Recommendation 1609
Positive
Experiences of Autonomous Regions as a Source
of Inspiration for
Conflict Resolution in Europe - 106
Resolution
1334
Positive
Experiences of Autonomous Regions as a Source
of Inspiration for
Conflict Resolution in Europe - 108
ALTERA
PARS
Ovidiu
Pecican
Romania. Dilemmas and Trends - 112
Setting
off by analysing the deep causes of the poverty in Romania, the author finds
out - beyond the appearances of democracy - a series of historical continuities
that
turn out to be not economical, but social. “Autarchy attitudes - the author
claims end up by causing stereotypical replication of the social behaviours, their
outcome
being stagnation, inertia, withering.” “As
the economical reform has been lagging for
more than a decade (…) and the monopoly over material resources and over
economical, social and politically relevant relationships is held by an oligarchy (…)
consisting
of former party members, of high
ranking army and intelligence service personnel, it
can be noted that the oligarchy type of regime has not been overthrown in
Romania,
despite some restructuring and
adaptations it had to undergo due to the changes in the
historical context.” Therefore, it is
no wonder there is an “invisible, but clear barrier between the rich and the poor, which is more and more restricting and
difficult to cross
and which generates an extreme social polarisation.” Romania is poor
rather because
of a certain tradition of lack in social bonds and because of the
oligarchy control over
society. All these phenomena are closely related to the southern model,
the “Walachian
model”, which is considered in an analysis by Daniel Chirot quoted here
as a political
economical system of the proto-colonial “community-trade” type that was
extended
over the other provinces too, when the south began governing the whole country
The
author ’s analysis comes round inevitably with relevant conclusions
regarding the real
“masters of
Romania”.
ANALYSES
Miklós
Bakk, Andor Horváth, Levente Salat
DAHR in 2003 searching for new ways
at the limits of
integration - 132
Shortly before the 6th congress of this
representative organisation of the Hungarians in
Transylvania - the DAHR, the three renown political scientists of the
Hungarian community seek
to make a survey of the period now ending and to find the possible ways
out from a paradigm that has exhausted its resources. Within the strategic
alternatives, the position of the official
leadership that considers there is no need for essential
changes in the platform clashes with that of the Reforming Bloc that
demands a re-
turning
to the bases of the “community autonomy”. According to the authors, neither
of the opinions is
grounded. Considering the situation the DAHR leadership has to
take into account, the authors think that
the relationship system, the scope of socialpolitical integration of the DAHR are influenced by four important processes:
Romania’s invitation to join NATO,
Hungary’s EU membership status, the dramatic decrease
of the Transylvanian Hungarian
community and its grim demographic prospects, and
the shaping of a new civic framework
of the Transylvanian Hungarian society. DAHR’s
integration into the system of the
Romanian political parties has had positive effects (it
has contributed to generating and strengthening confidence in the
Hungarian elite
and it has rendered it possible to
implement that specific part of the DAHR platform
that could be included into the minimum reform), but it has had also its
costs (it has
brought about a favouring of backstage
politics and, while some minority goals have
been achieved, they have been unduly made up for by voting laws that
have a detrimental effect on the quality of democracy).
Thus, a rethinking of the strategies of the
Hungarian community becomes
compulsory a rethinking whose conceptual thesaurus
should include both the consociative and the regional model of European
integration.
CASE STUDY
István Haller
Bilingual Inscription of the
Streets in Târgu-Mureş - 150
In 1995 Romania ratified the Framework Convention for
the National Minorities Protection, and in 2001 the Law on the Local Public Administration was
promulgated, and
both of them provide for bilingual inscriptions. The original and
symptomatic way these provisions were implemented results from the ordeal of the street name
inscriptions in
Tîrgu-Mureş, a bilingual city, ordeal analysed with legal acrimony by
the author of the
case study here, a legal case that is seeking, like many others, its
resolution before the
European Court of Human Rights. Despite all domestic and international law
provisions, the nationalist-communist policy of the Ceauşescu regime of total
elimination of
the traditional bilingualism is, unfortunately still pursued by the
state authorities, including the Romanian judiciary that resort to most perfidious means to protract
the
implementation
of the law. The progress of the whole matter tells its own story
TRANSYLVANIAN CONVERGENCIES
Paul
Philippi
Guests or Citizens with Full
Rights? - 167
The renown Saxon historian, president of honour of the
Democrat Forum of the Germans, strives to answer this challenging question facing the Banat Swabian
community by attempting a foray both into the older history of the Saxons in
Transylvania and
into the
recent history of the German community in Romania on the whole. After its
unprecedented exodus in the last decades,
this community is now justly trying to answer the dilemmatical question: what
has become of us, a remnant of a population that
hasn’t left yet or a community that
has stayed because it wants to live its life here? A
dramatic, existential question, that deserves an optimistic answer.
FACES OF EUROPE
Christoph Pan
South Tyrol - 173
The renown specialist in minority rights, an excellent
expert in South Tyrol autonomy
and at the same time an actor in its achievement, having first reviewed
the history of the
achievement of this autonomy - a paragon in the field of European after
war public
policies - then proceeds to analysing the characteristic aspects of this
autonomy. “South
Tyrol’s development after 1945 - stresses the author in his concluding remarks
- is to be
seen under the guiding idea of minority protection through autonomy.
Some particular
aspects of the South Tyrolean autonomy are really of interregional or
even international
interest. About 103 million out of the total of 757 million Europeans
between the Atlantic
and the Urals are persons belonging to minorities. That means that one
out of seven
Europeans belongs to one out of 337 ethnic or national minorities in Europe.
South
Tyrol’s autonomy has therefore a political importance even for the whole
Europe.”
DEBATE
Religious Freedom and European
Integration - 182
On the 26th of June 2003 the Forum of the Pro
Europe League’s Intercultural Center
was held at
Cluj, its theme being “Religious Freedom and European Integration”.
There were invited representatives of the
religious cults, of public authorities, of democratic political parties, of civil society and of the media. The themes
debated by the
participants were “the relationship between
church and state. The part of the religious cults in the process of Romania’s accession to the European Union”, and
“the situation of the
churches in Romania and accession criteria. The case of the Romanian
Greek-Catholic Church”. The text here is an
edited and abridged version of the debate.
Documents
of the Committee of Action for the Completion
and Spreading of the
Memorandum for the Romanian
Greek-Catholic
Church Unite with Rome - 227
RESTITUTIO
Ambrus Miskolczy
The History of the Romanians in
the Reformation - 237
Reformation, this “great revolution of the 16th
century” as the author labels it, took
place exactly in the period when Transylvania was an independent principality
and its
influence on
the culture of all the Transylvanian national communities, including the
Romanian one, was decisive. A hectic
historic period, full of contradictions and drama,
but also of spectacular
developments, is mirrored in this study in its whole complexity
with all its positive and negative effects on the Romanian population in
Transylvania.
As it ignores the Romanian national myths connected to this period and it makes
use of
a critical tone while listing the omissions by Hungarian historians of
some of the excessively politicized historical events, the study gains in objectivity coming
close to a
Transylvanian convergence outlook.
ECUMENICA
Miklós Tomka
Religiosity in Transylvania - 252
“Many studies have been brought out during the last
decades dealing with the data on
religion in Romania, and in Transylvania, respectively The publication
of the statistical data on religion from a comparative-historical perspective has also
been started,
setting off
from the results of the 1992 census. There are few writings that dare deal
with the present situation and the
evolution of religiosity and, even in the most renown
works in the field, one can encounter
serious errors like, for instance, those regarding
the proportion of the atheists”, states the author at the beginning of
his study. The
study here breaks new ground both by its richness of data and the objectiveness
of
their interpretations, providing thus an excellent incentive for a deep
research and
academic debate. Its reference to
comparative data on the Hungarian and Polish situation in the field is meant to make
even clearer our view on the European region we live in.
REVIEWS
Laura Ardelean
Irina Culic: Câştigătorii.
Elita
politică şi democratizare în România. 1989-2000
(Irina Culic: The
winners. Political elite and democratization in
Romania. 1989-2000) - 272