Description

Book Synopsis

Why do states ban certain statements and interpretations of the past, how do they ban them and what are the practical consequences? This book offers an answer to these questions and at the same time examines, whether the respective legislation was supply-or demand-driven and how prosecutors and courts applied it. The comparison between Germany, Poland, Ukraine, Rwanda and Turkey offers several surprising insights: in most countries, memory law legislation is supply driven and imposed on a reluctant society, in some countries they target apolitical hooligans more than intellectuals or the government’s political opponents. The book also discusses, why and how liberal democracies differ from hybrid regimes in their approach to punitive memory laws and how such laws can be tailored to avoid constraints on free speech, the freedom of the press and academic freedoms.



Table of Contents

Memory laws, politics of history, Holocaust denial, Rwanda, Ukraine, Germany, Poland, Turkey, genocide ideology, denialism, lustration, communism, Holocaust, defamation

Criminalizing History: Legal Restrictions on

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    A Hardback by Klaus Bachmann, Christian Garuka

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      View other formats and editions of Criminalizing History: Legal Restrictions on by Klaus Bachmann

      Publisher: Peter Lang AG
      Publication Date: 02/04/2020
      ISBN13: 9783631809570, 978-3631809570
      ISBN10: 3631809573

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Why do states ban certain statements and interpretations of the past, how do they ban them and what are the practical consequences? This book offers an answer to these questions and at the same time examines, whether the respective legislation was supply-or demand-driven and how prosecutors and courts applied it. The comparison between Germany, Poland, Ukraine, Rwanda and Turkey offers several surprising insights: in most countries, memory law legislation is supply driven and imposed on a reluctant society, in some countries they target apolitical hooligans more than intellectuals or the government’s political opponents. The book also discusses, why and how liberal democracies differ from hybrid regimes in their approach to punitive memory laws and how such laws can be tailored to avoid constraints on free speech, the freedom of the press and academic freedoms.



      Table of Contents

      Memory laws, politics of history, Holocaust denial, Rwanda, Ukraine, Germany, Poland, Turkey, genocide ideology, denialism, lustration, communism, Holocaust, defamation

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