著者
加藤 房雄
出版者
広島大学経済学会
雑誌
広島大学経済論叢 = The Hiroshima economic review (ISSN:03862704)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.40, no.1, pp.1-13, 2016-11

本稿は、平成25年度~平成28年度日本学術振興会科学研究費助成事業基盤研究(C)「ドイツ農業とアメリカ金融資本の歴史的相関―未公刊一次資料に基づく実証的基礎研究」(課題番号25380428)」、ならびに、平成26年度~平成28年度信託研究奨励金「ドイツ信託遺贈制(フィデイコミスFideikommiss)の三つの課題に関する基礎研究―現代的意義・成立史・近代的利用」による研究成果の一部である。
著者
日本医療団編
出版者
日本医療団
巻号頁・発行日
1977
著者
仁田 太一
出版者
関西大学
雑誌
法学ジャーナル (ISSN:02868350)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.91, pp.465-494, 2016-03-20
著者
大嶋 えり子
出版者
一般財団法人 日本国際政治学会
雑誌
国際政治 (ISSN:04542215)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.2016, no.184, pp.184_103-184_116, 2016

<p>Recognising memories of past perpetrations or not is often an issue connected with responsibility and reconciliation between victims and perpetrators. This has been for a long time an issue vexing French authorities.</p><p>In the 1990's, French government and parliament began to recognise memories related to the colonisation and the independence war of Algeria. Although French authorities had kept silent on those dark events to which many fell victim on both sides of the Mediterranean Sea, they started to recognise memories related to Algeria by erecting memorials, opening museums and making laws.</p><p>This article aims at elucidating why the French parliament made laws recognising memories related to Algeria. Making memory-related laws, called "memory laws (lois mémorielles)", is a particular way to France to recognise certain perceptions of the past, and is different from other memory recognitions as it has a binding force.</p><p>I thus considered two laws, made in respectively 1999 and 2005. The law passed in 1999, that I will call the "Algerian war law", replaces the term "the operations in North Africa" with "the Algerian war or the battles in Tunisia and Morocco" in the French legislative lexicon. It officially recognises that the conflict in Algeria from 1954 to 1962 was a war, whereas it has been long reckoned to be a domestic operation aiming at maintaining order. The law enacted in 2005, that I will call the "repatriate law", pays homage to former French settlers in Algeria for their achievements and emphasises the "positive role of the French presence abroad".</p><p>This study shows that those two laws were made in order to reinforce national cohesion among French people, instead of fostering dialogue between Algerians and French. By examining the wording and the law making processes of the two acts in question, especially the debates conducted at the National Assembly, it sheds light on how French elected representatives tried not to acknowledge France's responsibility for the damages caused during the colonisation and the independence war and how they attached little importance to reconciliation with Algeria. Both laws indeed do not contain memories of Algerian people harmed under French rule, except some parts of the memory of Harkis, who fought with the French army during the war.</p><p>The recognition of memories by official authorities of former perpetrators has significant repercussions and can encourage reconciliation between antagonists. It however tends to avert eyes from victims'memories in France when the past related to Algeria is in question. Issues connected with memory do not only concern relations between France and Algeria, but also involve the larger question of how to remember perpetrations caused by discriminatory policies and how to overcome them to accede to reconciliation between victims and perpetrators.</p>
著者
土倉 莞爾
出版者
關西大學法學會
雑誌
関西大学法学論集 (ISSN:0437648X)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.66, no.4, pp.787-830, 2016-11

【論説】Articles