Dr. Ernő Kállai

Curriculum Vitae of Dr. Ernő KÁLLAI, Deputy-Commissioner for Fundamental Rights, responsible for the Rights of Nationalities

 

 

 

Studies

 

2008                Ph.D. degree in legal theory and legal sociology at the Deák Ferenc Doctoral School of Law and Political Sciences, University of Miskolc

1997 - 2002     Eötvös Loránd University Faculty of Law and Political Sciences - lawyer

1994 - 1998     Eötvös Loránd University Faculty of Arts - secondary school teacher of history

1990 - 1994     Eszterházy Károly Teacher Training College - teacher specialised in history and music

1994 - 1995     Journalism School - certified journalist

1995                Hungarian Radio - news editor and radio journalist

 

Employment

 

2010                Eszterházy Károly College, Faculty of Teacher Training and Knowledge Technology - head of department

2009                University of Debrecen, Faculty of Law and Political Sciences, Department of Constitutional Law - guest professor

2008                Corvinus University of Budapest, Post-graduate specialist training programme in equality and minority issues - mentor and guest professor

2007                Parliamentary Commissioner for National and Ethnic Minority Rights

2002 - 2010     Apor Vilmos Catholic College, Institute of Romology and Applied Social Sciences - head of institute, college professor

1998                Hungarian Academy of Sciences Ethnic and National Minority Research Institute - Head of research group on Romology

1999 - 2002     Miskolc University, Department of Sociology, professor

1996 - 1998     member of staff of the Roma Civil Rights Foundation

1988 - 1997     teacher at various educational institutions

 

Scholarships

 

2000 - 2002     Civic Education Project

1997 - 1999     Soros Foundation

1998 - 2002     European Roma Rights Centre

1997 - 1999     Roma Civil Rights Foundation, „Invisible College" for Roma students

 

Public and professional activities

 

2007 -              Member of the Equal Treatment Professional Advisory Board

2002- 2005      Member of the board of trustees of the Autonomy Foundation

1998- 2004      Member of the board of trustees of the Gandhi Public Foundation

 

Membership of professional organisations

 

Hungarian Sociological Society - member of the Presidential Board

Hungarian Academy of Science - member of the Public Body

Hungarian Association of Lawyers

Hungarian Society of Political Sciences

Hungarian Ethnographical Society

 

Awards

 

2006                Award for Minorities

2005                honoured by the National Gypsy Self-Government for excellence in research

 

Main areas of research using empirical data survey in the past years

 

  • Emergence of cultural rights of the minority communities'
  • The new paradigms of handling of ethnic data
  • Roma entrepreneurs in Hungary
  • Research on local Gypsy minority self-governments
  • The past and present of Gypsy musicians
  • The social history of the Hungarian Roma in the 20th century
  • Equal opportunities of Roma in Hungary. Self-governance, positive discrimination, and the role of education in improving the situation of the Roma - theoretical and practical models
  • The theoretical models and practice in Hungary of local Gypsy minority self-governments
  • The cultural autonomy of minorities

Press releases

null Message of the Commissioner for Fundamental Rights of Hungary on World Children’s Day

Message of the Commissioner for Fundamental Rights of Hungary on World Children’s Day

“Every child is important, as is every right of the child: to protect and ensure them is a fundamental obligation of the state. Our common responsibility lies in creating a better, more liveable, child-centred future”, as Ombudsman Dr. Ákos Kozma reminds us on World Children’s Day. The Commissioner for Fundamental Rights of Hungary believes that amidst the increasing challenges of our days such as war conflicts, the global climate change, as well as skyrocketing digital development, even more attention should be paid and even more resources should be allocated to the well-being of children, the protection of their mental health and hearing their opinions.

We celebrate children’s rights and also, children in general, on 20 November each year all over the world. We commemorate the adoption of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child with great respect and appreciation, which has clearly not only created a catalogue of children’s rights but also, is one of the most important and most successful examples for the international protection of human rights. It should be stressed that it is not simply a human rights document which can serve as a basis for the legal systems of many states with regard to children’s rights. The truth is that every human and every child can identify with the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child in such a way that the exercising and the limitability of children’s rights are the inevitable sources of disputes and compromises. This is why it is of key importance to ensure that the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child is in fact accessible to everybody, so they can get acquainted with the rights and principles enshrined therein.

The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child is a standard and a point of reference, which makes it clear that every child is a human with genuine and enforceable rights from the day of his or her birth but also, one who cannot be a mere instrument or subject of a decision. Every year, it should be pointed out that children are not small adults but they are not humans without rights or capacities either: children are humans with their own rights, dignity, will and personality, who deserve respect, attention and appreciation. In the case of children’s rights, it is of key importance that both the parents and the state allow the children to exercise them in harmony with their unfolding abilities, so that children can make their voices heard. All such initiatives and proposals are welcome and are to be supported which wish to involve children in a meaningful dialogue about our common causes and future, in harmony with their age. 

In Hungary, it is the Commissioner for Fundamental Rights who is responsible for safeguarding the rights of the child. It is the Ombudsman’s responsibility to continuously monitor the fulfilment of the international legal obligations with regard to children’s rights, in addition to which he also promotes the professional dialogue related to children’s rights and he takes constructive participation in finding the answers.  Thus, the Ombudsman pays special attention to the protection of children’s rights in 2023 as well, be they related to children raised in their families or in state care, educational, health care issues, or children with disabilities.

In 2023, the Ombudsman has conducted four inquiries, concluded by a report, that monitored the operation of a children’s home, a residential care home or a special children’s home by paying unannounced visits in the wake of a petition or a signal. This year saw the publication of a comprehensive report as well, in which the Ombudsman formulated numerous recommendations and proposals with regard to the care to be provided to children in state care or foster care. Furthermore, in his report, the Ombudsman dealt with the questions of the regulation of special diet public catering in nursery schools, as well as the education of special needs children in separate SNI groups in play schools. In addition to this, a report was issued on imposing the disciplinary measure of expulsion from school of a school age child, as well as the evaluation of the parents’ petition to the operator, and also, on ensuring the transportation of a special needs child to school.