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Slovakia
Maria Kolikova
Coordinator
Nadacia Obcan a Demokracia (Citizen and Democracy Foundation)
: Minority Rights Group - Slovakia (MRG-S)
Dobrovicova 13
811 09 Bratislava
Slovakia
Tel/Fax: 421-7-5292-0426
E-mail: mrgs@changenet.sk
Website: www.changenet.sk/mrgs
Additional Team Members:
-Janka Hazirova, Open Society Foundation - Slovakia
-Sarlotta Pufflerova, Open Society Foundation - Slovakia
-Jan Hrubala, Partners for Democratic Change
Team members in MRG-S:
- coordinator: Maria Kolikova (kolikova@changenet.sk)
- coordinator/supervisor: Sarlota Pufflerova
- local coordinators: Daniela Telepkova, Janka Debreceniova
- assistants: Sylvia Ondrisova, Marek Hrouda
- lawyers: Zuzana Dlugosova, Tomas Kamenec
Cooperating partners - experts:
- psychologists: Ivan Rapos, Igor Obuch, Milan Zacharovsky
- lawyers: Jan Hrubala, Ladislav Briestensky, Martin Dobak, Andrej
Kralik, Viliam Karas, Marian Hrban, Roman Oleksik
STREET LAW PROGRAM COMPONENTS:
- SECONDARY SCHOOL PROGRAM AND RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT
Slovakia has produced four "Street Law" booklets.
Two additional booklets are being produced. A teacher manual
to support all six booklets is also being completed. This manual
will be published with support from Open Society Foundation
and the Ford Foundation.
- TEACHER TRAINING
Trainers have trained teachers and community members throughout
the country for the past four years. The majority of schools
in Slovakia use some or all of the materials.
- Open Society Foundation (OSF):
The OSF/Street Law Program is coordinated by Janka Hazirova.
The main goal of this program is to create and coordinate a
mixed lector team of law students or law school graduates, policemen
and high school teachers, who will train different target groups
such as teachers of secondary schools or policemen. The participants
are encouraged to teach Street Law using all Street Law materials
produced within the program. The program began in 1999.
EQ Club
In 2000, the Street Law Program was also used in EQ Club, as
coordinated by Ladislav Briestensky. The main goal of this program
was to train a specific target group: law students to teach
Street Law using its manuals developed by OSF. Each workshop
was designed with new manuals such as Citizen and His Possibilities,
Civil law, Criminal law and than Family law and Labor law. This
program started in 1999.
- Nadacia Obcan a Demokracia (Citizen and Democracy Foundation):
Minority Rights Group - Slovakia (MRG-S)
Street Law program in MRG-S is coordinated by Maria Kolikova
and Sarlota Pufflerova. There are five main goals of this program,
which began in 1997:
1. To produce and disseminate resource books and methodological
manuals (Citizen and Democracy, 1997, Methodological Manual
for Teachers, 1999, Citizen and Public Administration, 2000)
for all who teach human rights and other related issues.
2. To develop cooperation between high schools and law students
by teaching Street Law lessons for high school students. It
partly covers training for law students, it supports coordination
of law students who teach Street Law lessons and it enables
their partnership with high school teachers.
3. To train teachers in interactive teaching and the law of
everyday life as human rights, rule of law as well as consumer
law, family law, criminal and civil procedure.
4. To train police officers teachers in human rights issues,
minority and domestic violence sensitiveness and methodology
how to teach interactively.
5. To demonstrate and introduce the Street Law program to new
communities - correction facilities for juveniles and prisons.
MRG-S Resource books and methodological manuals include Citizen
and Democracy, 1997, Methodological Manual for Teachers, 1999,
Citizen and Public Administration, 2000
First book of the series was published in 1997. It contains
22 chapters beginning with a chapter dealing with concepts like,
"why do we need a legal order", and proceeds with
chapters concerning the principles of democracy and rule of
law. The book finishes with chapters concerning basic human
rights such as freedom of expression, right to assembly and
many others. It is written in comprehensive language and is
used not only by teachers, students, journalists, but also by
local government representatives.
All publications have been created in the framework of the Constitutionalism
in Central and Eastern Europe Project, and in close cooperation
of psychologists and lawyers. Foreign examples were not used
as the authors had been inspired from situations of every day
life in Slovakia.
The first book of the series was published in 1997. It contains
22 chapters beginning with a chapter dealing with concepts like,
"why do we need a legal order", and proceeds with
chapters concerning the principles of democracy and rule of
law. The book finishes with chapters concerning basic human
rights such as freedom of expression, right to assembly and
many others. It is written in comprehensive language and is
used not only by teachers, students, journalists, but also by
local government representatives.
All publications have been created in the framework of the Constitutionalism
in Central and Eastern Europe Project, and in close cooperation
of psychologists and lawyers. Foreign examples were not used
as the authors had been inspired from situations of every day
life in Slovakia.
- LAW SCHOOL CLINICS
The Slovakian team is in the process of developing three law
school clinics as official law school programs. Volunteer law
student clinics have operated for three years.
Street Law Clinic at Trnava University Law School
On November 24 and 25, 2000, MRG-S held a Street Law Clinic
conference with the aim of demonstrating Street Law programs
to the law schools. The participants were representatives from
law schools, law students, high school teachers and representatives
from the prison education department. Foreign guests - Monika
Platek, David Mason and Viktor Pronkin who all have much experience
with the institutionalization of Street Law Programs in their
country were also invited to the conference. After the conference
one of the 4 law schools agreed to integrate Street Law into
their curricula with teachers of MRG-S. The Street Law Clinic
has recently been designed for 4th grade law students as a yearlong
course.
- FUNDING RESOURCES:
· Pew Charitable Trusts
· Street Law, Inc.
· Ford Foundation
· Open Society Foundation
· COLPI
· Department for International Development of British
Government
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