Wikipedia:Centralized discussion/Macedonia: Difference between revisions

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* The Greek government disputes the historical appropriateness of this name and demands the adoption of a composite name with some geographical qualifier.<ref>[http://www.mfa.gr/www.mfa.gr/en-US/Policy/Geographic+Regions/South-Eastern+Europe/Balkans/Bilateral+Relations/FYROM/FYROM+-+THE+NAME+ISSUE.htm]</ref> Some parties in Greece reject ''any'' use of "Macedonia" in the country's name.
* The Greek government disputes the historical appropriateness of this name and demands the adoption of a composite name with some geographical qualifier.<ref>[http://www.mfa.gr/www.mfa.gr/en-US/Policy/Geographic+Regions/South-Eastern+Europe/Balkans/Bilateral+Relations/FYROM/FYROM+-+THE+NAME+ISSUE.htm]</ref> Some parties in Greece reject ''any'' use of "Macedonia" in the country's name.
* As a consequence of the naming dispute, the UN in 1993 admitted the state as "the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia" (explicitly noting that this was not supposed to be a "name", but what the UN called a "provisional reference"<ref>http://www.un.org/documents/ga/res/47/a47r225.htm</ref><ref>Jochen Abr. Frowein, Rüdiger Wolfrum, Max Planck Yearbook of United Nations Law 1997, p. 239. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1998</ref><ref>"[http://assembly.coe.int/Main.asp?link=/Documents/WorkingDocs/Doc08/EDOC11524.htm Use of the provisional reference “the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia” at the Council of Europe]". Council of Europe Doc. 11524, 8 February 2008</ref>).
* As a consequence of the naming dispute, the UN in 1993 admitted the state as "the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia" (explicitly noting that this was not supposed to be a "name", but what the UN called a "provisional reference"<ref>http://www.un.org/documents/ga/res/47/a47r225.htm</ref><ref>Jochen Abr. Frowein, Rüdiger Wolfrum, Max Planck Yearbook of United Nations Law 1997, p. 239. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1998</ref><ref>"[http://assembly.coe.int/Main.asp?link=/Documents/WorkingDocs/Doc08/EDOC11524.htm Use of the provisional reference “the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia” at the Council of Europe]". Council of Europe Doc. 11524, 8 February 2008</ref>).
* Major international organisations such as the [[NATO]]<ref>http://www.nato.int/cps/en/SID-494DFF10-6692E233/natolive/51288.htm</ref> and [[OSCE]]<ref>http://www.osce.org/about/13131.html#T</ref>, have followed UN usage.
* Most other international organisations have followed UN usage or variants of it, as have several dozen UN member states.
* There isn't consensus among UN members or english-speaking nations<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonia_naming_dispute#Lists_of_countries</ref>. Several have recognised the country under its constitutional name for bilateral relations, while others use the provisional UN name for all official purposes.
* Just under two-thirds of UN member states (125 out of 192) have recognised the country under its constitutional name of "Republic of Macedonia".<ref>{{cite web | title = FM Milososki: Name row a result of Greece's desire to protect its myth of pure nation | url = http://www.vlada.mk/?q=node/2273 Government of the Republic of Macedonia | quote = the fact that 125 countries in the world have recognised Macedonia's constitutional name is a clear signal that the country has international support }}</ref> This includes all of the major English-speaking nations except Australia, New Zealand and South Africa.
* Proposed diplomatic solutions to the political conflict have envisaged that the country should adopt some qualifying adjective as part of its official name for use in international contexts, e.g. "North Macedonia" or "Nova Makedonija" ("New Macedonia")<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonia_naming_dispute#The_newest_proposal_and_reactions</ref>. It cannot presently be predicted how common English usage worldwide would reflect a new settlement, if one were reached in the near future.
* Proposed diplomatic solutions to the political conflict have envisaged that the country should adopt some qualifying adjective as part of its official name for use in international contexts, e.g. "North Macedonia" or "Nova Makedonija" ("New Macedonia")<ref>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonia_naming_dispute#The_newest_proposal_and_reactions</ref>. It cannot presently be predicted how common English usage worldwide would reflect a new settlement, if one were reached in the near future.
* The following facts about usage are largely agreed upon:
* The following facts about usage are largely agreed upon:

Revision as of 23:47, 21 June 2009

This page is for centralised discussion about Macedonia-related naming issues, in particular:

  • What should be the conventions for page titles of sub-articles dealing with the country or the other Macedonias?
  • What should be the conventions for referring to the country from other articles?

Structure

This process has been initiated by the Arbitration Committee and is overseen by a team of three admin-referees appointed by the committee, Fritzpoll (talk · contribs), J.delanoy (talk · contribs), and Shell Kinney (talk · contribs).

The process has been divided up into a number of sub-pages for better structuring

This central page provides a general overview of the issue and the process. The central talk page is for discussing procedural questions.

The main topic discussions will be held at several sub-pages dealing with separate issues. In the current phase, participants are invited to work together to establish an outline of the issues to be decided, by assembling a set of alternative proposals, each with a concise summary presentation of the arguments for and against. Some rules of conduct are outlined here.

Other pages:

  • evidence is for presenting factual evidence in support of proposals.
  • Nationalities and affiliations: a page where some participants have voluntarily provided statements disclosing their national affiliations, for transparency.

Principles

The discussion process is installed in response to an Arbitration Committee decision at WP:ARBMAC2, which says:


Policies, guidelines, links

Arbitration cases:

  • WP:ARBMAC2 – Arbitration case regarding the Macedonia naming dispute
  • WP:ARBMAC - Older arbitration case

Policies and guidelines listed as relevant in ARBMAC2 decision:

Other guidelines:

  • WP:NCON – Specialised guideline for naming conflicts
  • WP:NCGN – Specialised guideline for geographical names

  • WP:MOSMAC – An old essay that aimed to be a specialised naming guideline for Macedonia topics, but failed to reach consensus.
  • Talk:Greece/Naming poll – March 2009 discussion and poll about reference to the neighbouring country in the Greece article.

Principles quoted from ARBMAC2:


Background

Macedonia
  • There are four principal meanings of the term "Macedonia" pertinent to this discussion:
  • The state formally calls itself the "Republic of Macedonia" (its "constitutional name", i.e. as formally established in its constitution)[1], informally just "Macedonia".
  • The Greek government disputes the historical appropriateness of this name and demands the adoption of a composite name with some geographical qualifier.[2] Some parties in Greece reject any use of "Macedonia" in the country's name.
  • As a consequence of the naming dispute, the UN in 1993 admitted the state as "the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia" (explicitly noting that this was not supposed to be a "name", but what the UN called a "provisional reference"[3][4][5]).
  • Major international organisations such as the NATO[6] and OSCE[7], have followed UN usage.
  • There isn't consensus among UN members or english-speaking nations[8]. Several have recognised the country under its constitutional name for bilateral relations, while others use the provisional UN name for all official purposes.
  • Proposed diplomatic solutions to the political conflict have envisaged that the country should adopt some qualifying adjective as part of its official name for use in international contexts, e.g. "North Macedonia" or "Nova Makedonija" ("New Macedonia")[9]. It cannot presently be predicted how common English usage worldwide would reflect a new settlement, if one were reached in the near future.
  • The following facts about usage are largely agreed upon:
    • The state's most frequent name in common English usage is simply "Macedonia".[10]
    • In common present-day English usage in general-purpose sources, when the name "Macedonia" is used it is most often referring to the country.[11] [12]
    • In older English usage and much of the existing academic literature, the name is more often used in other meanings, especially that of the ancient kingdom.[13]
    • Wikipedia's article on the country has a much larger readership than all other Macedonia articles (roughly 5 times more than Macedonia (ancient kingdom), 10 times more than Macedonia (Greece), 20 times more than Macedonia (region), and 3 times more than all these together.)[14]

References