The Max van der Stoel Award 2014 Programme and 2011 Commemoration
Proceedings and winners of the Max van der Stoel Award ceremonies of 2011 and 2014. The Max van der Stoel Award Commemorative Award 2014 Programme and 2011 Commemoration provides an overview of the award ceremony. It features the winners of the award in 2011, the Nansen Dialogue Centre Skopje, and in 2014, Spravedlivost (a human rights NGO from southern Kyrgyzstan) and their activities to improve the position of national minorities in their respective OSCE participating States.
The Max van der Stoel Award Commemorative Book 2009
Proceedings and winner of the Max van der Stoel Award ceremony 2009. The Max van der Stoel Award Commemorative Book 2009 provides an overview of the award ceremony, including key speeches by the OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities, the foreign minister of the Netherlands and the laureate. It features the winner of the award, the Integration and Development Center for Information and Research, Crimea, Ukraine, and its activities to improve the position of national minorities in OSCE participating States.
The Max van der Stoel Award Commemorative Book 2007
Proceedings and winner of the Max van der Stoel Award ceremony 2007. The Max van der Stoel Award Commemorative Book 2007 provides an overview of the award ceremony, including key speeches by the OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities, the foreign minister of the Netherlands and the laureate. It features the winner of the award, the European Roma Rights Centre, Budapest, and their activities to improve the position of national minorities in OSCE participating States.
The Max van der Stoel Award Commemorative Book 2003 and 2005
Proceedings and winners of the Max van der Stoel Award ceremonies 2003 and 2005. The Max van der Stoel Award Commemorative Book 2003 and 2005 provides an overview of the awards ceremonies in these two years, including key speeches by the OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities, the foreign minister of the Netherlands and the laureates. It also features the winners of the awards, in 2003, the Latvian Centre for Human Rights and Ethnic Studies, Riga, and in 2005, the Memorial Historical, Educational, Human Rights and Charitable Society, Moscow, and both organizations’ efforts to improve the position of national minorities in OSCE participating States.