Interview questions started with the question of "who is human," perhaps the most fundamental question of human rights law. Then questions were prepared in a framework in which both the existing human rights law system was based and turned into a question.
The questions that are based on the human rights systems of the countries and the connection of this system with the international human rights law system are the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 8th questions. Within the 8th question, it is also aimed to obtain data on how much human rights issues in Europe are met at other points of the world.
The 5th, 6th, and 7th questions, in which the existing human rights system has been turned into a question, have been prepared based on conflicts or similarities between the phenomenon of human and human rights shaped by the social, political, historical, cultural and geographical realities of the countries and the "universal" international human rights law. In other words, these questions aimed at obtaining data to projection on the reality of the discourse of the universality of human rights law built based on individualism, European history, culture, economy, and geography.
Obtaining data on the existence of countries' legal mechanisms and their contribution to the protection of human rights is also among the aims of the research.
The 9th, 10th, and 11th questions were prepared in the context of minority rights, to obtain data on the conflict of locality and universality or the completion of each of these facts.
Finally, with the 12th question, if the world's panorama was taken in terms of current human rights issues, attempts were made to answer the question of what data could be obtained. In actuality, this question has automatically provided data for many of the questions above.