For Centenary of the Lausanne Treaty: Re-Interpretation and Re-Implementation of Linguistic Minority Rights of Lausanne

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2023

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Brill Academic Publishers

Open Access Color

OpenAIRE Downloads

OpenAIRE Views

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

The Treaty of Lausanne was signed on 24th July 1923 as a peace treaty that ended the first world war for Turkey and the allied powers. In a section entitled "protection of minorities", it provides rights for minorities. However, the beneficiaries of minority rights in Lausanne are more narrow than those provided in other treaties and declarations of the time. With a legal basis in domestic law, Turkey traditionally applied the rights provided in the Lausanne Treaty only for three so-called non-Muslim groups, i.e. Greeks, Armenians and Jews. Neither the Turkish delegation nor the members of the allied forces' delegations could foresee that some members of the Muslim groups of 1923 might quit Islam in the future and recourse to Lausanne rights as new beneficiaries. This article, by referring to preparatory works of the Treaty, examining its legal validity internationally and nationally, and applying interpretative principles of international treaties, argues for the extension of Lausanne rights to other groups via re-interpretation and re-implementation. © 2023 Olgun Akbulut.

Description

Keywords

Lausanne Treaty, linguistic rights, minorities, treaty interpretation, Turkey

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

Citation

0

WoS Q

N/A

Scopus Q

N/A

Source

International Journal on Minority and Group Rights

Volume

Issue

Start Page

End Page