Right to homeland
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The right to homeland is according to some legal scholars a universal human right, which is derived from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, including its Article 9.[1][2] The concept evolved in German jurisprudence and is recognized in German constitutional law to a certain degree. Notable proponents of the concept include legal scholars Kurl Rabl, Rudolf Laun, Otto Kimminich, Dieter Blumenwitz, Felix Ermacora and Alfred-Maurice de Zayas. The concept is relevant to debates concerning ethnic cleansing in Europe after World War II (notably of Germans and Hungarians), ethnic cleansing in Palestine, Cyprus and other areas.
See also
[edit]- Aboriginal title
- Diaspora politics
- Ethnic federalism
- Expulsion of the Chagossians
- Hawaiian homeland
- Home rule
- Jewish homeland
- Right of return
- Right to exist
- Nation state
- Blood and soil
References
[edit]- ^ de Zayas, Alfred-Maurice (1975). "International Law and Mass Population Transfers". Harvard International Law Journal: 207–258.
- ^ de Zayas, Alfred-Maurice (1996). "The Right to One's Homeland, Ethnic Cleansing and the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia". Criminal Law Journal.
Categories:
- Autonomous administrative divisions
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- Cultural geography
- Decolonization
- Diaspora studies
- Ethnic conflict
- Ethnicity in politics
- Human rights by issue
- Indigenous land rights
- International law legal terminology
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- Property law legal terminology
- Stateless nationalism
- Human rights stubs