กลับไปหน้าบทความ

อ่าน 2 นาที

Copenhagen Declaration

องค์กรเพื่อความมั่นคงและความร่วมมือในยุโรป

The Copenhagen Declaration is a text agreed by the CSCE in June 1990 at Copenhagen. It contains specific election-related commitments.

Copenhagen Declaration

The Copenhagen Declaration is a text agreed by the CSCE in June 1990 at Copenhagen.[1][2][3] It contains specific election-related commitments.[4]

Yuri Reshetov, the head of the Soviet delegation dubbed it the new European constitution. His American counterpart, Max Kampelman, labelled it "a programme for democratic action".[5]

NATO is of the opinion that "At the Copenhagen CSCE Conference on the Human Dimension, Eastern European countries (excluding Albania, which joined the CSCE process in June 1991) commit themselves to multipartyparliamentary democracy and to the rule of law."[6] The document was part of the legacy of President George Bush.[7]

Signatories

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Copenhagen_Declaration&oldid=1327131165"

สรุปเนื้อหา

ข้อมูลสำคัญจากบทความ

ข้อมูลสำคัญเกี่ยวกับ Copenhagen Declaration

The Copenhagen Declaration is a text agreed by the CSCE in June 1990 at Copenhagen. It contains specific election-related commitments.

Signatories

Austria Belgium Bulgaria Canada Cyprus Czechoslovakia Denmark Finland France German Democratic Republic Federal Republic of Germany Greece Holy See Hungary Iceland Ireland Italy Liechtenstein Luxembourg Malta Monaco Netherlands Norway Poland Portugal Romania...