CIVIL SOCIETY PROJECT
This Project has been awarded in terms of the EDRC’s status as
a Jean Monnet European Centre of Excellence. In its
first year 2005, the Project focused on Anti-Discrimination, Inclusion
and Equality in Malta. Themes which were discussed in the Report
and subsequently in the Conference included:
1. Gender;
2. Religion;
3. Race and Ethnicity;
4. Disability;
5. Sexual Orientation; and
6. Age
This Report served as the basis for the first Civil Society Conference
held on 15th September 2005, titled: Working for an Inclusive Society
which it gave the participants the opportunity to analyse the present situation
in Maltese society.
Conference
Programme
All Conference participants and all European Documentation Centres worldwide
received a follow-up CD containing the Report and the proceedings
of the Conference.
Click here for CD:
Anti-Discrimination,
Inclusion and Equality in Malta
In it's second year the Project focused on The Family in Malta, Europe
and the Mediterranean. The focus was on family values in the
context of Malta’s role as a Member State and the possible impact of the
Acquis, and our possible influence on it. The perspective was a multi-disciplinary
one involving participants from NGOs and academics specialising in different
fields such as Law, Theology, Philosophy, Sociology, Anthropology, Public
Policy and others.
The three main themes were:
1. The Concept of the Family in Law, Sociology and Religion;
2.Reconciliation of Work and Family in the EU; other Social Issues
and Maltese Policy; and
3.The Multicultural Society, Secularism, Christianity, Judaism and
Islam - a false confrontation of values?
The second Civil Society Project Report titled: The Family, Law,
Religion and Society in the European Union and Malta was published
in July in time for the Conference participants to evaluate the state of
affairs in Malta and be prepared for the Conference which took the debate
forward, and examined policies and experiences at European level.
On 19th September 2006 a Conference titled: Family Values in the
European Union and Malta was addressed by experts in the field including
former and current members of the European Parliament.
Conference
Programme
Click here for CD:
The Family, Law,
Religion and Society in the European Union and Malta
Workshop Results
The Civil Society Project is now in it's third year, and the theme this
year is Ethics in Business in Europe and the Mediterranean. The
theme is set against the broad background of the Project to date, namely
the place and role of values in the Acquis Communautaire. This year's
Project asks: What shared values emerge within the EU and between the EU
and its Neighbours in the sphere of Business and Civil Society?
The four main themes are:
1. Corporate Social Responsability (CSR) and Values;
2. Corporate Governance (CG) and Values;
3. Business and Society, with special regard to Vulnerable Groups;
and
4. Civil Society and CSR and CG
The same pattern as in previous years that, is the publication of the
Civil Society Project Report, a Conference and the dissemination of CDs
worldwide follows.
THE INTERCULTURAL-DIALOGUE PROJECT
This two-year Jean Monnet Project involves many contributors coming
from different multi-cultural backgrounds, who however share the same objective
that is, their aim to study intercultural dialogue and factors that enhance
it.
The Project consists of the following four working groups, each coordinated
by a partner University:
Working Group 1: Intercultural Dialogue and Human Rights, Civil Society
and World Order Issues (co-ordinated by Prof. Marco Mascia - University
of Padova)
Working Group 2: Intercultural Dialogue and Democracy (co-ordinated
by Prof. Maria Karasinska-Fendler - University of Lodz)
Working Group 3: Intercultural Dialogue and EU-Med Partnership (co-ordinated
by Prof. Peter G. Xuereb - University of Malta)
Working Group 4: Governing a Multi-Cultural Europe (co-ordinated by
Prof. Constantin Stephanou - Panteion University)
Citizenship is a central theme of all Groups and it will be tackled
from different perspectives such as international law, human rights, integration,
and democracy.
All group co-ordinators addressed a first Conference in Padova on 24th
and 25th March.
Conference
Programme
In order to examine the most important concepts related to Intercultural
Dialogue and the EU-Med Partnership, Prof Xuereb split the members of Working
Group 3 into three workshops:
1. Evolution of Citizenship and Fundamental Rights under the Partnership
2. The Nurturing and Development of Civil Society
3. The Mobilisation of NGOs in the Partner Countries, their roles,
relations with European NGOs and their engagement in global NGO networks.
The culmination of this Project is a Conference in Padova, Italy at
the beginning of March 2007, and the publication of all the participants'
papers in an extensive Report, in preparation for 2008 - the year dedicated
by the European Commission to Intercultural Dialogue.
The participants in these workshops have extensive experience and expertise
in EU-Med research, and most of them have also previously contributed to
the EDRC's EU-Med Project.
RECENT COMPLETED PROJECTS
EU-MED PROJECT
The Malta European Studies Association (MESA) in conjunction with the
European Documentation and Research Centre (EDRC), University of Malta
was awarded a subsidy from the European Commission for setting up a Regional
and Transnational Research Group. The duration of the project was
for two years from 15th December 2002 to 31st December 2004.
PROJECT TITLE: INTEGRATION AND CO-OPERATION IN AND BETWEEN THE EU
AND THE MEDITERRANEAN
CONTEXT:
The Project studied the process of regional integration in and between
the EU, and the Mediterranean in the context of EU Enlargement, the Future
of Europe, the creation of the EU-MED Free Trade Area, and the objectives
of security, stability and sustainability.
THE GROUP:
The research group decided to style itself the “EU-Med Transnational
and Regional Research Network”. Its core was composed of a mix of senior
researchers including a number of Jean Monnet Professors and young researchers.
The Project co-ordinator was the Malta European Studies Association (which
operates for these purposes through the European and Documentation and
Research Centre of the University of Malta) and the EDRC itself. A consortium
of National ECSAs and Jean Monnet Centres of Excellence was formed.
List
of Consortium Partners and Participants
THE PROJECT:
The group worked on EU-Med adoption of the Acquis. It has produced
five volumes of studies for wide dissemination via CD ROM and via all ECSAs.
This project widened the focus of the group to cover the wider impact of
Enlargement and Regional Integration – both North-South and South-South.
Against the background of the focal themes of the Project as set out
above, the researchers focused on key policy areas by reference to most
of the following:
-
Enlargement of the Single Market to the Mediterranean region
-
The EU-Med Single Market Concept
-
The Search for a Political Economy Model for EU-Med Integration
-
The Contribution of the Mediterranean to the formulation of EU Policy-making
and Policies
-
Constitutional Issues in the EU and the Mediterranean
-
EU Public Policy Issues
-
Institution-Building in and through the Euro-Med Partnership Process
-
Immigration Policy
-
Democratisation including Minority Rights
-
Social Policy
-
Regional Policy
-
CESDP
-
Regulatory Issues
-
Economic and Industrial Restructuring
-
Trade Policy
-
The Euro-Med Agreements as a tool for Integration
-
Monetary Issues and relations
-
Competition Law, Intellectual Property, and Company Law
-
Looking Forward beyond Enlargement to the Future shape of the Euro-Med
Partnership
-
Suggested reforms in the Euro-Med Partnership and MEDA Environmental
Policy and the Sustainable Development Plan
-
Civil Society, Gender, Language, Culture, Education
Other issues that were also addressed included the implications
of the many new and foreseen developments in the Union Acquis, the Euro-Med
Acquis included, in the context of Enlargement, and even the Future of
Europe. Moreover, The shifting geo-political, geo-economic and legal scenarios
on the variegation or otherwise of EU-Med and Med-Med relations were and
still are of primary concern.
The background work done by many participants on the phenomenon of ‘reception’
of the acquis under past scenarios offered an excellent springboard to
analyse the impact of the forces at work in the present contexts. A systematic
approach focusing on the main theme and sub-themes set out above is intended
to lead to a coherent picture of the interplay also of the various forces
at work and will enable us and policy-makers to come to conclusions regarding
the potential of a developing Acquis to work as a force for heightened
(to an unprecedented degree) stability, prosperity and democracy in the
Euro-Mediterranean Region.
PUBLICATIONS UNDER THE PROJECT:
1. The Mediterranean's European Challenge - Vol I
2. The Mediterranean's European Challenge - Vol II
3. Euro-Mediterranean Integration - The Mediterranean's European Challenge
- Vol III
4. Euro-Med Integration and the 'Ring of Friends' - The Mediterranean's
European Challenge - Vol IV
5. The European Union and the Mediterranean – The Mediterranean’s European
Challenge – Vol. V
Peter G. Xuereb (Professor)
Project Co-ordinator
Professor of European and Comparative Law
Jean Monnet Professor of European Union Law and European Integration
President, Malta European Studies Association
Chairman, European Documentation and Research Centre, University of
Malta.
This page was last updated on 3rd November 2006
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