Council of Europe
Encyclopedia : C : CO : COU : Council of Europe
The Council of Europe (French: Conseil de l'Europe /kɔ̃ˈsɛj.də.lˈœʁɔp/, German: Europarat /ɔɪ.ˈʁoː.pʰaˌʁaːtʰ/) is an international organization of 46 member states in the European region. Its main success was the European Convention on Human Rights in 1950, which serves as the basis for the European Court of Human Rights. The seat of the Council of Europe is in Strasbourg on the Franco-German border. Originally meeting in Strasbourg's University Palace, it is now domiciled in the Palais de l'Europe about two kilometres from city centre. Membership is open to all European democracies which accept the principle of the rule of law and guarantee fundamental human rights and freedoms to their citizens.
The Council of Europe is not to be confused with the Council of the European Union or the European Council, as it is a separate organisation and not part of the European Union.
Founding
The Council of Europe was founded following a speech given by Winston Churchill at the University of Zurich on 19 September, 1946 ([text of speech]) calling for a "United States of Europe", similar to the United States of America, in the wake of the events of World War II.The Council was officially founded on 5 May, 1949 by the Treaty of London agreed to by the ten original members. This treaty is now known as the Statute of the Council of Europe.
Aims
Article 1(a) of the Statute states:
- The aim of the Council of Europe is to achieve a greater unity between its members for the purpose of safeguarding and realising the ideals and principles which are their common heritage and facilitating their economic and social progress.
- Protection of democracy and the rule of law
- Protection of human rights, notably:
- * Social rights, with the European Social Charter
- * Linguistic rights, with the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages
- * Media freedom, with the European Convention on Human Rights
- Promotion of Europe's cultural identity and diversity, with the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities
- Addressing problems facing European society including discrimination, xenophobia, environmental degradation, AIDS, drugs and organised crime
- Encouraging democratic stability via reform.
Institutions
The institutions of the Council of Europe are:
- The Secretariat and the Secretary-General
- The Committee of Ministers
- The Parliamentary Assembly (PACE)
- The European Court of Human Rights
- The [Commissioner for Human Rights]
- The [European Directorate for the Quality of Medicines]
Symbols
Main article: European symbolsThe Council of Europe is responsible for the notable European flag with 12 golden stars (upward pointing) arranged in a circle on a blue background since 1955, and the anthem based on the Ode to Joy in the final movement of Ludwig van Beethoven's Ninth symphony since 1972. In 1964, it established the anniversary of its founding on 5 May 1949 as Europe Day. (The EU has also designated a Europe Day - May 9. See European Symbols.)
To avoid confusion with the European Union, which uses the same flag, the Council often uses a modified version with a stylised lower-case 'e' in the centre of the stars which is referred to as the 'Council of Europe Logo' [link].
Membership
Today, there are 46 member states, including nearly every European state. Upon foundation on May 5, 1949 there were ten members:
- (9 August 1949)
- (9 August 1949)
- (9 March 1950)
- Federal Republic of Germany (13 July 1950)
- (16 April 1956)
- (24 May 1961)
- (6 May 1963)
- (29 April 1965)
- (22 September 1976)
- (24 November 1977)
- (23 November 1978)
- (16 November 1988)
- (5 May 1989)
- (6 November 1990)
- (26 November 1991)
- (7 May 1992)
- (14 May 1993)
- (14 May 1993)
- (14 May 1993)
- (30 June 1993)
- (30 June 1993)
- (7 October 1993)
- (10 October 1994)
- (10 February 1995)
- (13 July 1995)
- (13 July 1995)
- (9 November 1995)
- (9 November 1995)
- (28 February 1996)
- (6 November 1996)
- (27 April 1999)
- (25 January 2001)
- (25 January 2001)
- (24 April 2002)
- (3 April 2003)
- (5 October 2004)
applied for observer status at the Parliamentary Assembly in 1999. The official response of PACE was that Kazakhstan could apply for full membership, because it is partially located in Europe, but that it would not be granted any status whatsoever at CoE until its democracy and human rights records improved.
The has observer status at the Committee of Ministers since 1970.
Following its declaration of independence on 2006-06-03,
| Municipalities of Montenegro |
|
|---|---|
| Andrijevica | Bar | Berane | Bijelo Polje | Budva | Cetinje | Danilovgrad | Herceg-Novi | Kolašin | Kotor | Mojkovac | Nikšić | Plav | Plužine | Pljevlja | Podgorica | Rožaje | Šavnik | Tivat | Ulcinj | Žabljak | |
On 2006-06-14, the Committe of Ministers declared that the Republic of Serbia will continue the membership of the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro.[link]
Some non-European states also have observer status at Council of Europe institutions:
- and the have observer status at the Committee of Ministers.
- Has observer status at the Parliamentary Assembly.
- and have observer status at both the Committee of Ministers and the Parliamentary Assembly.
Membership of Germany and Saarland
In 1950 Germany and Saarland became associate members. Germany became full member in 1951. Saarland withdrew the independent membership in 1956. Saarland integrated into Germany in 1957.This played a role in the stars of the Flag of Europe.
See also
- Europe
- European Union
- Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
- Common European Framework of Reference for Languages
- European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages
- Strasbourg
External links
- [Council of Europe] - Official site
- [Statute of the Council of Europe]
- [Eurominority map of minorities, native peoples and ethnic groups]
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
