
The Council of Europe project "Cultural identities, shared values and
citizenship" (2006-2008) was launched after the Organisation's 3rd
Summit (Warsaw, 2005). It was based on the premise that an awareness and appreciation of Europe's rich diversity of cultures and heritages and how they have interacted with each other over time are essential
preconditions for mutual respect, peaceful coexistence, intercultural
dialogue, a shared attachment to common values and an emerging European
cultural citizenship. One of the outcomes of the project was the Handbook on values for life in a democracy which is structured around a
series of key questions to promote discussion among young people about
universal human rights and the implementation of core European values.
This book encourages the reader to apply these values to a variety of
issues. The case studies it presents and the discussion cards are
designed to promote an approach to discussion where each participant
can: develop his or her own point of view in relation to others;
think about clashes of values and human rights and how they might be resolved in fair, balanced, proportionate and peaceful ways; empathise
with others' points of views (even if not agreeing with them); engage
in dialogue over disputed issues rather than in monologues based solely
on his or her own point of view or cultural perspective; set
particular issues and debates into a wider historical, cultural and
global context. These core "procedural" values need to be practised and
upheld not only in the law courts but in our everyday dealings with each
other. Otherwise they become meaningless and we will cease to have any
real sense of commitment to them. Just as we learn skills by practising
them, so we acquire these values by practising them.
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