Menu Search VHL web CS

Václav Havel Human Rights Prize – Fences, Walls and Trenches: Freedom of Movement as a Human Right?

Added: October 12, 2016

Photo: 1Photo: 2Photo: 3Photo: 4Photo: 5Photo: 6Photo: 7Photo: 8Photo: 9Photo: 10Photo: 11Photo: 12Photo: 13Photo: 14Photo: 15Photo: 16Photo: 17Photo: 18Photo: 19Photo: 20Photo: 21Photo: 22Photo: 23Photo: 24Photo: 25Photo: 26Photo: 27Photo: 28Photo: 29Photo: 30Photo: 31Photo: 32Photo: 33Photo: 34Photo: 35Photo: 36Photo: 37Photo: 38Photo: 39Photo: 40Photo: 41Photo: 42Photo: 43Photo: 44Photo: 45Photo: 46Photo: 47Photo: 48Photo: 49Photo: 50Photo: 51Photo: 52Photo: 53Photo: 54Photo: 55Photo: 56Photo: 57Photo: 58Photo: 59Photo: 60Photo: 61Photo: 62Photo: 63Photo: 64Photo: 65Photo: 66Photo: 67Photo: 68Photo: 69Photo: 70Photo: 71Photo: 72Photo: 73Photo: 74Photo: 75Photo: 76Photo: 77Photo: 78Photo: 79Photo: 80Photo: 81Photo: 82Photo: 83Photo: 84Photo: 85Photo: 86Photo: 87Photo: 88Photo: 89Photo: 90Photo: 91Photo: 92Photo: 93Photo: 94Photo: 95Photo: 96Photo: 97Photo: 98Photo: 99Photo: 100Photo: 101Photo: 102

Fourth annual international conference in honour of the laureate of the Václav Havel Human Rights Prize with the participation of this year’s three finalists and other eminent guests, including Michael Ignatieff, director of the Central European University, and Ales Bialiatski and Anar Mammadli, the 2013 and 2014 recipients of the Václav Havel Human Rights Prize. The theme was the world migration phenomenon and its influence on the policies of European institutions, the governments of EU member states and public opinion.

Share

Facebook | Twitter

More galleries

Most recent