EADI: No development without freedom

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EADI Statement September 2017

Established in 1975, the European Association of Development Research and Training Institutes (EADI) has its Secretariat in Bonn. With over 150 institutional and many individual members from 28 countries it is the leading Europe-wide network in its field [for more information visit www.eadi.org/about/ ].

Development Studies is – like development – not a value-free exercise. “Leaving no one behind” as imperative for inclusive development had been coined as a slogan by the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which were adopted by the General Assembly in September 2015 as Agenda 2030.

The agreed goals stress the universal dimension of rights as much as obligations. But only two years into Agenda 2030 we are already witnessing an increase in processes and practices of exclusion: for many years, a growing number of scholars have been rejected from entering fortress Europe to attend international conferences. They are thereby banned from engaging in dialogue despite meeting all of the strict criteria to temporarily enter Europe. They are continuously humiliated and reminded of the structurally rooted inequalities, injustices and asymmetries that govern our world.

But as the SDGs stress, we can meet the global challenges only through worldwide cooperation. This includes scholarly efforts to discuss development related matters collectively whilst recognising and including a range of perspectives and experiences. The growing restrictions on mobility are restricting such efforts. They limit not only the freedom of physical movement but also the freedom of speech and thought. While EU member states claim to be a value-based association we are also witnessing a growing erosion of fundamental rights and values within Europe, limiting further the capacity to diagnose, discuss and address global problems with scholars from outside of Europe.

While being a European Association, EADI does not adopt a restricted and narrow-minded perspective on development, which is a local as much as a shared global challenge. This requires open minded exchanges and intellectual cross-fertilization. Both need unlimited exposure to all forms of knowledge able to contribute to solving the massive problems our world is confronted with. Assessments and problem-solving efforts rely on interaction based on mutual respect and recognition. We need to listen and learn as much as to talk and teach.

EADI members and institutions herewith express their concern about the increasing restrictions imposed on scholars and the academic freedom as well as the freedom of speech in many countries, including within Europe. We are shocked to witness the prosecution of those who practice democracy as an integral and substantial part of good governance and civil rights. We will explore how best we can support those who as scholars are the victims of undemocratic, authoritarian rule and are prosecuted because of their democratic engagement. We appeal to governments and academic institutions alike to provide space and shelter for scholars in need. EADI member institutions are encouraged to collaborate in the efforts to accommodate those who are robbed of the means to continue their work.

Sustainable development, as advocated by the 17 SDGs in Agenda 2030, requires the promotion of dignity and security for all people on our planet. It demands empathy and solidarity with those victimized by increasingly repressive populist regimes as well as other ideologically obsessed governments and groups promoting xenophobia and other forms of discrimination and exclusion. In contrast, EADI will – also in the spirit of SDG 17 (“revitalise the global partnership for sustainable development”) – continue to protect and promote the freedoms we need as a prerequisite to fully engage with and address the developmental challenges in the only world we have.

September 2017

Prof Dr Henning Melber (EADI President)

Susanne von Itter (EADI Executive Secretary)

EADI Executive Committee Members and Management Committee

Prof Katja Bender (EADI Vice-President)

Prof Laura Camfield (EADI Vice-President)

Prof Uma Kothari (EADI Vice-President)

Dr Jürgen Wiemann (EADI Vice-President)

Doris Bauer (Austria)

Associate Professor

Elin Bjarnegård (Sweden)

Prof Nadia Molenaers (Belgium)

Dr Ondrej Horky (Czech Republic)

Dr Mikkel Funder (Denmark)

Dr Paola Minoia (Finland)

Dr Anne le Naëlou (France)

Dr Sven Grimm (Germany)

Prof Imre Levai (Hungary)

Prof Honor Fagan (Ireland)

Prof Elisabetta Basile (Italy)

Dr Stefano Moncada (Malta)

Associate Prof Kees Biekart (The Netherlands)

Prof Darley Jose Kjosavik (Norway)

Dr Katarzyna Jarecka (Poland)

Assistant Prof Pedro Goulart (Portugal)

Dr Simona Moagar Poladian (Romania)

Assistant Prof Bostjan Udovic (Slovenia)

Prof Antonio Sianes (Spain)

Prof Alessandro Monsutti (Switzerland)

Networks and EADI members

Development Studies Association of Ireland (DSAI)

Development Studies Association of the UK (DSA)

Finnish Society for Development Research (FSDR)

REEDES – La Red Española de Estudios del Desarrollo

The Association of Development Researchers in Denmark (FAU)

The Norwegian Association for Development Research (NFU)

UniPID – Finnish University Partnership for International Development and Research (OeAD GmbH)

Prof Isa Baud (former EADI President)

Maarten Bavinck, Director, CERES (The Netherlands)

Maja Bucar, Centre of International Relations (Slovenia)

Rafael Domínguez, Cátedra COIBA, Universidad de Cantabria (Spain)

Professor Caroline Dyer, University of Leeds (UK)

Isabel Guenther, NADEL ETH Zurich (Switzerland)

Jan Monteverde Haakonsen (Norway)

Tom De Herdt, Chair Institute of Development Policy, University of Antwerp (Belgium)

David Hulme, Manchester (UK)

dr. Huib Huyse (HIVA-KU Leuven) (Belgium)

Prof Emmanuel de Kadt (former EADI President)

Peter Kragelund, Roskilde University (Denmark)

Petr Kratochvíl, Institute of International Relations, Prague (Czech Republic)

Jon-Andri Lys, KFPE (Switzerland)

Melissa Leach, Institute of Development Studies (IDS) (UK)

Ottar Mæstad, Director Chr Michelsen Institute (CMI) (Norway)

Prof Jean-Luc Maurer (Honorary Professor at the Graduate Institute and former EADI President) (Switzerland)

Prof Andreas Mehler (Director, Arnold-Bergstraesser Institute, Freiburg) (Germany)

Pavel Nováček (Czech Republik)

Prof. Dr. Andreas Obrecht, Commission for Development Research (KEF) at the Austrian Agency for International Cooperation in Education and Research (OeAD GmbH)

Prof Helen O’Neill (former EADI President) (Ireland)

Dr Sheila Page (former EADI President) (UK)

Petr Pavlík (Czech Republic)

Iina Soiri, Director, The Nordic Africa Institute (Sweden)

Prof Sergio Tezanos Vasquez (former EADI Vice-President) (Spain)

Prof Louk de la Rive Box (former EADI President, former rector International Institute of Social Studies and Prof. em. Maastricht University) (The Netherlands)

Maria Sassi, CICOPS – University of Pavia (Italy)

Meera Tiwari, University of East London (UK) Centre for Global Development, University of Leeds (UK)

Centro de Estudos sobre África, Ásia e América Latina (CeSA) (Portugal)

Centre of International Relations, Slovenia (Slovenia)

Comparative Research Programme on Poverty (CROP) (Norway)

Centre for Administration and Public Policies (CAPP), University of Lisboa (Portugal)

Dept of Anthropology and Development Studies, Radboud University (The Netherlands)

Department of Government, Uppsala University (Sweden)

Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik – German Development Institute (Germany)

ECDPM (The Netherlands)

International Development Department, University of Birmingham (UK)

Mundus maris – Sciences and Arts for Sustainability (Belgium)

ÖFSE – Austrian Foundation for Development Research (Austria)

Transnational Institute (TNI) (The Netherlands)

Source: Notification EADI, 05.10.2017

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EADI Statement September 2017

Established in 1975, the European Association of Development Research and Training Institutes (EADI) has its Secretariat in Bonn. With over 150 institutional and many individual members from 28 countries it is the leading Europe-wide network in its field [for more information visit www.eadi.org/about/ ].

Development Studies is – like development – not a value-free exercise. “Leaving no one behind” as imperative for inclusive development had been coined as a slogan by the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which were adopted by the General Assembly in September 2015 as Agenda 2030.

The agreed goals stress the universal dimension of rights as much as obligations. But only two years into Agenda 2030 we are already witnessing an increase in processes and practices of exclusion: for many years, a growing number of scholars have been rejected from entering fortress Europe to attend international conferences. They are thereby banned from engaging in dialogue despite meeting all of the strict criteria to temporarily enter Europe. They are continuously humiliated and reminded of the structurally rooted inequalities, injustices and asymmetries that govern our world.

But as the SDGs stress, we can meet the global challenges only through worldwide cooperation. This includes scholarly efforts to discuss development related matters collectively whilst recognising and including a range of perspectives and experiences. The growing restrictions on mobility are restricting such efforts. They limit not only the freedom of physical movement but also the freedom of speech and thought. While EU member states claim to be a value-based association we are also witnessing a growing erosion of fundamental rights and values within Europe, limiting further the capacity to diagnose, discuss and address global problems with scholars from outside of Europe.

While being a European Association, EADI does not adopt a restricted and narrow-minded perspective on development, which is a local as much as a shared global challenge. This requires open minded exchanges and intellectual cross-fertilization. Both need unlimited exposure to all forms of knowledge able to contribute to solving the massive problems our world is confronted with. Assessments and problem-solving efforts rely on interaction based on mutual respect and recognition. We need to listen and learn as much as to talk and teach.

EADI members and institutions herewith express their concern about the increasing restrictions imposed on scholars and the academic freedom as well as the freedom of speech in many countries, including within Europe. We are shocked to witness the prosecution of those who practice democracy as an integral and substantial part of good governance and civil rights. We will explore how best we can support those who as scholars are the victims of undemocratic, authoritarian rule and are prosecuted because of their democratic engagement. We appeal to governments and academic institutions alike to provide space and shelter for scholars in need. EADI member institutions are encouraged to collaborate in the efforts to accommodate those who are robbed of the means to continue their work.

Sustainable development, as advocated by the 17 SDGs in Agenda 2030, requires the promotion of dignity and security for all people on our planet. It demands empathy and solidarity with those victimized by increasingly repressive populist regimes as well as other ideologically obsessed governments and groups promoting xenophobia and other forms of discrimination and exclusion. In contrast, EADI will – also in the spirit of SDG 17 (“revitalise the global partnership for sustainable development”) – continue to protect and promote the freedoms we need as a prerequisite to fully engage with and address the developmental challenges in the only world we have.

September 2017

Prof Dr Henning Melber (EADI President)

Susanne von Itter (EADI Executive Secretary)

EADI Executive Committee Members and Management Committee

Prof Katja Bender (EADI Vice-President)

Prof Laura Camfield (EADI Vice-President)

Prof Uma Kothari (EADI Vice-President)

Dr Jürgen Wiemann (EADI Vice-President)

Doris Bauer (Austria)

Associate Professor

Elin Bjarnegård (Sweden)

Prof Nadia Molenaers (Belgium)

Dr Ondrej Horky (Czech Republic)

Dr Mikkel Funder (Denmark)

Dr Paola Minoia (Finland)

Dr Anne le Naëlou (France)

Dr Sven Grimm (Germany)

Prof Imre Levai (Hungary)

Prof Honor Fagan (Ireland)

Prof Elisabetta Basile (Italy)

Dr Stefano Moncada (Malta)

Associate Prof Kees Biekart (The Netherlands)

Prof Darley Jose Kjosavik (Norway)

Dr Katarzyna Jarecka (Poland)

Assistant Prof Pedro Goulart (Portugal)

Dr Simona Moagar Poladian (Romania)

Assistant Prof Bostjan Udovic (Slovenia)

Prof Antonio Sianes (Spain)

Prof Alessandro Monsutti (Switzerland)

Networks and EADI members

Development Studies Association of Ireland (DSAI)

Development Studies Association of the UK (DSA)

Finnish Society for Development Research (FSDR)

REEDES – La Red Española de Estudios del Desarrollo

The Association of Development Researchers in Denmark (FAU)

The Norwegian Association for Development Research (NFU)

UniPID – Finnish University Partnership for International Development and Research (OeAD GmbH)

Prof Isa Baud (former EADI President)

Maarten Bavinck, Director, CERES (The Netherlands)

Maja Bucar, Centre of International Relations (Slovenia)

Rafael Domínguez, Cátedra COIBA, Universidad de Cantabria (Spain)

Professor Caroline Dyer, University of Leeds (UK)

Isabel Guenther, NADEL ETH Zurich (Switzerland)

Jan Monteverde Haakonsen (Norway)

Tom De Herdt, Chair Institute of Development Policy, University of Antwerp (Belgium)

David Hulme, Manchester (UK)

dr. Huib Huyse (HIVA-KU Leuven) (Belgium)

Prof Emmanuel de Kadt (former EADI President)

Peter Kragelund, Roskilde University (Denmark)

Petr Kratochvíl, Institute of International Relations, Prague (Czech Republic)

Jon-Andri Lys, KFPE (Switzerland)

Melissa Leach, Institute of Development Studies (IDS) (UK)

Ottar Mæstad, Director Chr Michelsen Institute (CMI) (Norway)

Prof Jean-Luc Maurer (Honorary Professor at the Graduate Institute and former EADI President) (Switzerland)

Prof Andreas Mehler (Director, Arnold-Bergstraesser Institute, Freiburg) (Germany)

Pavel Nováček (Czech Republik)

Prof. Dr. Andreas Obrecht, Commission for Development Research (KEF) at the Austrian Agency for International Cooperation in Education and Research (OeAD GmbH)

Prof Helen O’Neill (former EADI President) (Ireland)

Dr Sheila Page (former EADI President) (UK)

Petr Pavlík (Czech Republic)

Iina Soiri, Director, The Nordic Africa Institute (Sweden)

Prof Sergio Tezanos Vasquez (former EADI Vice-President) (Spain)

Prof Louk de la Rive Box (former EADI President, former rector International Institute of Social Studies and Prof. em. Maastricht University) (The Netherlands)

Maria Sassi, CICOPS – University of Pavia (Italy)

Meera Tiwari, University of East London (UK) Centre for Global Development, University of Leeds (UK)

Centro de Estudos sobre África, Ásia e América Latina (CeSA) (Portugal)

Centre of International Relations, Slovenia (Slovenia)

Comparative Research Programme on Poverty (CROP) (Norway)

Centre for Administration and Public Policies (CAPP), University of Lisboa (Portugal)

Dept of Anthropology and Development Studies, Radboud University (The Netherlands)

Department of Government, Uppsala University (Sweden)

Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik – German Development Institute (Germany)

ECDPM (The Netherlands)

International Development Department, University of Birmingham (UK)

Mundus maris – Sciences and Arts for Sustainability (Belgium)

ÖFSE – Austrian Foundation for Development Research (Austria)

Transnational Institute (TNI) (The Netherlands)

Source: Notification EADI, 05.10.2017

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