Confronting the Past: European Experiences Series of Political Science Research Centre Forum Book 10

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Confronting the Past: European Experiences Series of Political Science Research Centre Forum Book 10 Confronting the Past: European Experiences Series of Political Science Research Centre Forum Book 10 Series Editors Erna Matanović Anđelko Milardović Davor Pauković Davorka Vidović Nikolina Jožanc Višeslav Raos Reviewers Darko Gavrilović Mila Dragojević Publisher © by Political Science Research Centre Zagreb, 2012 ISBN 978-953-7022-26-6 CIP record is available in an electronic catalog of National and University Library numbered 804399 CONFRONTING THE PAST: EUROPEAN EXPERIENCES Editors Davor Pauković Vjeran Pavlaković Višeslav Raos www.cpi.hr Zagreb, May 2012 Contents Introduction ....................................................................................... 9 I. Politics of the Past 1. Three Aspects of Dealing with the Past: European Experience ............................................................... 17 Anđelko Milardović 2. International Legal and Institutional Mechanisms and Instruments that Influence on Creating Past ............................ 27 Maja Sahadžić 3. The Effects of National Identification and Perceived Termination of Inter-ethnic conflicts on Implicit Intergroup Bias (Infrahumanization, Linguistic Intergroup Bias and Agency) ............................................................................. 67 Csilla Banga, Zsolt Péter Szabó, János László 4. When Law Invades Utopia: The Past, the Peace and the Parties .......................................... 87 Colm Campbell 5. The War is over? Post-war and Post-communist Transitional Justice in East-Central Europe ............................................... 107 Csilla Kiss 6. The Past in the Present: Post-communist Croatia .................. 129 Albert Bing 7. Croatia’s Transformation Process from Historical Revisionism to European Standards ...................................... 163 Ljiljana Radonić 8. The Role of History in Legitimizing Politics in Transition in Croatia .......................................................... 183 Davor Pauković 2. Culture of Memory 1. “I Switched Sides” - Lawyers Creating the Memory of the Shoah in Budapest ...................................................... 223 Andrea Pető 2. Memoricide: A Punishable Behavior? ................................... 235 Šejla Haračić 3. Historical Legacies and the Northern Ireland Peace Process ............................................. 267 Thomas Fraser 4. Rituality, Ideology and Emotions. Practices of Commemoration of the Giorno del Ricordo in Trieste ......... 285 Vanni D’Alessio 5. Conflict, Commemorations, and Changing Meanings: The Meštrović Pavilion as a Contested Site of Memory ....... 317 Vjeran Pavlaković 6. The Wall of Pain: A Contested Site of Memory in Contemporary Croatia ....................................................... 353 Višeslav Raos 7. Consensus, Leadership and totalitarianism: open questions concerning the historiographical debate on Italian Fascism ....................................................... 383 Patricia Chiantera-Stutte 8. Historical Memory as a Factor of Strengthening Belarusian National Identity ............................................. 401 Aliaksei Lastouski Vjeran PaVlakoVić DaVor PaukoVić VišeslaV RAOS Introduction This edited volume is based on the conference proceedings pre- sented and discussed at the international conference Confronting the Past, held on 23 April 2009 at the European House in Zagreb. This academic conference, organized jointly by the Political Science Re- search Centre and the Scientific Forum, gathered researchers from Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Hungary, United Kingdom (North- ern Ireland), Portugal, Latvia, Belarus, Macedonia, Austria, and Italy. The conference focused on the various experiences and practices of European states and societies in dealing with troubled pasts and often authoritarian legacies in the course of the 20th century. The idea behind the conference was to portray diverse European perspectives on pro- cesses of confrontation with recent history. The papers presented at the conference included a multitude of views and opinions, some of which may be in conflict with each other or provoke controversies in the field of memory studies. The Political Science Research Centre seeks to organize academic events with a strong multidisciplinary character, and this conference brought together political scientists, historians, ethnographers, lawyers, sociologists, and psychologists to discuss the challenges of confronting the past. It was divided in two panels which explored the various facets of collective remembrance and the politicization of historical narratives. The first panel, titled Politics of the Past, dealt with various political processes and practices of con- 10 Editors frontation with the legacy of wars, war crimes, mass crimes and au- thoritarian and totalitarian regimes. The second panel, named Culture of Memory, focused on the modes and manners of remembrance and commemoration of victims of war crimes and crimes and injustices committed by authoritarian and totalitarian regimes. Due to unforeseen circumstances caused by the global economic crisis which took its toll on the Croatian scientific community and the Political Science Research Centre, the preparation of this edited volume took somewhat longer than initially planned. The editing and reviewing of the papers submitted to this volume, which comprise expanded and revised versions of the papers originally presented at the conference in 2009, resulted in the final selection of those papers which conformed to standards of academic writing and methodology. Also, while trying to retain the diversity of views and topics, as well as country coverage, we selected those papers which could be grouped in a coherent list of research themes. Of the twenty-three papers present- ed at the conference, seventeen were included in this edited volume. This book is organized into two sections, bearing the same titles as the two conference panels – Politics of the Past and Culture of Memory. The first part opens with an introductory chapter by Anđelko Milardović, director of the Political Science Research Centre (Zagreb, Croatia) and scientific advisor at the Institute for Migration and Eth- nic Studies (Zagreb, Croatia). Milardović gives a concise overview of the practice of dealing with the past in contemporary Europe from the perspective of political science. He puts specific emphasis on the German experience and the politics of the past (Vergangenheitspolitik) practiced in that country. Also, Milardović draws a clear distinction between an academic approach to dealing with the past (through the use of scientific methodology) and a political, or ideological, frame- work in which the past is constructed, contested, reinterpreted, and negotiated. In the second chapter Maja Sahadžić from the Faculty of Law of the University of Zenica (Bosnia and Herzegovina) discusses interna- Introduction 11 tional institutional and legal mechanisms in dealing with the past. She analyzes the work of institutions such as the International Military Tri- bunal for the Far East, the International Criminal Tribunal for the for- mer Yugoslavia, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, the International Criminal Court, the Special Court for Sierra Leone, the Extraordinary Chambers of Cambodia, the East Timor Special Panels for Serious Crimes, the Special Tribunal for Lebanon, and the Iraqi High Tribunal. Sahadžić explores the challenges facing these institu- tions in their efforts to rebuild post-conflict societies. Csilla Banga, Zsolt Péter Szabó and János László from the Depar- tment of Psychology at the Faculty of Humanities of the University of Pécs (Hungary) examine linguistic integroup bias, infrahumanization, and agency in the context of Central and Eastern European inter-eth- nic historical conflicts�������������������������������������������������in the third chapter�����������������������������. This empirical study inclu- ded the following cases: Romania, Slovakia, Serbia, Russia, Croatia, Poland, and Lithuania. The fourth chapter, written by Colm Campbell from the Transi- tional Justice Institute at the University of Ulster (Northern Ireland, United Kingdom), deals with truth commissions in Northern Ireland and their role in the efforts at achieving transitional justice in that part of Europe. In his analysis, Campbell considers the numerous political, social and legal issues involved with the work of truth commissions in Ulster. Csilla Kiss from ISES at the University of Western Hungary in Szombathely addresses transitional justice in post-communist Central and Eastern Europe in chapter five, with a special emphasis on the con- cept of lustration. Kiss explores the differences between post-conflict justice in Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic and Slovakia after World War II (communist transitional justice) and after the fall of the Berlin Wall (democratic transitional justice). In her comparison of these two historic processes, Kiss concludes that they share many similarities. The sixth chapter, authored by Albert Bing from the Croatian In- stitute for History in Zagreb, deals with the role history played in the political culture and governing style of the new post-communist po- 12 Editors litical elite in Croatia, personified by first president Franjo Tuđman, a historian and ex-communist dissident. According to Bing, Tuđman’s politics of the past included both a willingful break away from Tito’s Yugoslavia as well as a continuance of Tito’s politicization of history. In the seventh chapter Ljiljana Radonić, from the Institute for
Recommended publications
  • FEEFHS Journal Volume VII No. 1-2 1999
    FEEFHS Quarterly A Journal of Central & Bast European Genealogical Studies FEEFHS Quarterly Volume 7, nos. 1-2 FEEFHS Quarterly Who, What and Why is FEEFHS? Tue Federation of East European Family History Societies Editor: Thomas K. Ecllund. [email protected] (FEEFHS) was founded in June 1992 by a small dedicated group Managing Editor: Joseph B. Everett. [email protected] of American and Canadian genealogists with diverse ethnic, reli- Contributing Editors: Shon Edwards gious, and national backgrounds. By the end of that year, eleven Daniel Schlyter societies bad accepted its concept as founding members. Each year Emily Schulz since then FEEFHS has doubled in size. FEEFHS nows represents nearly two hundred organizations as members from twenty-four FEEFHS Executive Council: states, five Canadian provinces, and fourteen countries. lt contin- 1998-1999 FEEFHS officers: ues to grow. President: John D. Movius, c/o FEEFHS (address listed below). About half of these are genealogy societies, others are multi-pur- [email protected] pose societies, surname associations, book or periodical publish- 1st Vice-president: Duncan Gardiner, C.G., 12961 Lake Ave., ers, archives, libraries, family history centers, on-line services, in- Lakewood, OH 44107-1533. [email protected] stitutions, e-mail genealogy list-servers, heraldry societies, and 2nd Vice-president: Laura Hanowski, c/o Saskatchewan Genealogi- other ethnic, religious, and national groups. FEEFHS includes or- cal Society, P.0. Box 1894, Regina, SK, Canada S4P 3EI ganizations representing all East or Central European groups that [email protected] have existing genealogy societies in North America and a growing 3rd Vice-president: Blanche Krbechek, 2041 Orkla Drive, group of worldwide organizations and individual members, from Minneapolis, MN 55427-3429.
    [Show full text]
  • With New Cogeneration Combined Cycle Power Plant in El-To Zagreb
    NON – TECHNICAL SUMMARY FOR REPLACEMENT OF UNIT “A“ WITH NEW COGENERATION COMBINED CYCLE POWER PLANT IN EL-TO ZAGREB EKONERG - Energy Research and Environmental Protection Institute Zagreb, April 2016 EKONERG Energy Research and Environmental Protection Institute Ltd. Koranska 5, Zagreb, Croatia Investor: HEP d.d. Zagreb Authorized Entity: EKONERG Ltd. Zagreb Work Order: I-03-0333 Contract No.: I-03-0333/16 Title: NON – TECHNICAL SUMMARY FOR REPLACEMENT OF UNIT “A“ WITH NEW COGENERATION COMBINED CYCLE POWER PLANT IN EL-TO ZAGREB Leading Report Developer: Gabrijela Kovačić, mag. ing. cheming Environmental Protection and General Manager: Sustainable Development Department Manager: Ph.D.Sc. Vladimir Jelavić M.Sc. Zdravko Mužek Zagreb, April 2016 Non – technical summary for replacement of unit A with new CCCPP in EL-TO Zagreb EKONERG Ltd. LIST OF AUTHORS: EKONERG Ltd: Nenad Balažin, mag. ing. mech. Elvira Horvatić Viduka, mag. phys.- geophys. Univ. spec. oecoing. Gabrijela Kovačić, mag. ing. cheming. Dr. sc. Vladimir Jelavić, mag. ing. mech. Maja Jerman Vranić, mag. chem. Renata Kos, mag. ing. min. Berislav Marković, mag. ing. prosp. arch. Veronika Tomac, mag. ing. cheming. Senka Ritz, mag. biol. Zoran Kisić, mag. ing. mech. Željko Danijel Bradić, mag. ing. aedif. Univ. spec. oecoing. Brigita Masnjak, mag. ing. cheming. SONUS Ltd: Miljenko Henich, mag. ing. el. techn. I-03-0333 I Non – technical summary for replacement of unit A with new CCCPP in EL-TO Zagreb EKONERG Ltd. TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................ 1 1 PROJECT DESCRIPTION ............................................................................................ 2 1.1 DESCRIPTION OF CURRENT AND FUTURE STATE AT EL-TO ZAGREB LOCATION .................................................................................................................. 2 1.2 RATIONALE OF THE PROJECT ................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Croatia Page 1 of 24
    2008 Human Rights Report: Croatia Page 1 of 24 2008 Human Rights Report: Croatia BUREAU OF DEMOCRACY, HUMAN RIGHTS, AND LABOR 2008 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices February 25, 2009 The Republic of Croatia is a constitutional parliamentary democracy with a population of 4.4 million. Legislative authority is vested in the unicameral Sabor (parliament). The president serves as head of state and commander of the armed forces, cooperating in formulation and execution of foreign policy; he also nominates the prime minister, who leads the government. Domestic and international observers stated that the November 2007 parliamentary elections were in accord with international standards. The government generally respected the human rights of its citizens; however, there were problems in some areas. The judicial system suffered from a case backlog, although courts somewhat reduced the number of unresolved cases awaiting trial. Intimidation of some witnesses in domestic war crimes trials remained a problem. The government made little progress in restituting property nationalized by the Yugoslav communist regime to non- Roman Catholic religious groups. Societal violence and discrimination against ethnic minorities, particularly Serbs and Roma, remained a problem. Violence and discrimination against women continued. Trafficking in persons, violence and discrimination against homosexuals, and discrimination against persons with HIV/AIDS were also reported. RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom From: a. Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of Life There were no reports that the government or its agents committed arbitrary or unlawful killings. During the year one mine removal expert and one civilian were killed, and one mine removal experts and two civilians were severely injured.
    [Show full text]
  • Memorial of the Republic of Croatia
    INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE CASE CONCERNING THE APPLICATION OF THE CONVENTION ON THE PREVENTION AND PUNISHMENT OF THE CRIME OF GENOCIDE (CROATIA v. YUGOSLAVIA) MEMORIAL OF THE REPUBLIC OF CROATIA ANNEXES REGIONAL FILES VOLUME 2 PART I EASTERN SLAVONIA 1 MARCH 2001 II CONTENTS ETHNIC STRUCTURES 1 Eastern Slavonia 3 Tenja 4 Antin 5 Dalj 6 Berak 7 Bogdanovci 8 Šarengrad 9 Ilok 10 Tompojevci 11 Bapska 12 Tovarnik 13 Sotin 14 Lovas 15 Tordinci 16 Vukovar 17 WITNESS STATEMENTS TENJA 19 Annex 1: Witness Statement of M.K. 21 Annex 2: Witness Statement of R.J. 22 Annex 3: Witness Statement of I.K. (1) 24 Annex 4: Witness Statement of J.P. 29 Annex 5: Witness Statement of L.B. 34 Annex 6: Witness Statement of P.Š. 35 Annex 7: Witness Statement of D.M. 37 Annex 8: Witness Statement of M.R. 39 Annex 9: Witness Statement of M.M. 39 Annex 10: Witness Statement of M.K. 41 Annex 11: Witness Statement of I.I.* 42 Annex 12: Witness Statement of Z.B. 52 Annex 13: Witness Statement of A.M. 54 Annex 14: Witness Statement of J.S. 56 Annex 15: Witness Statement of Z.M. 58 Annex 16: Witness Statement of J.K. 60 IV Annex 17: Witness Statement of L.R. 63 Annex 18: Witness Statement of Đ.B. 64 WITNESS STATEMENTS DALJ 67 Annex 19: Witness Statement of J.P. 69 Annex 20: Witness Statement of I.K. (2) 71 Annex 21: Witness Statement of A.K. 77 Annex 22: Witness Statement of H.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Main Tour Itinerary
    Sacramento Choral Society American Celebration of Music in Austria, Slovenia, & Croatia June 16 – 25, 2019 (8 nights/10 days) Day 1 Sunday, June 16 2:55pm Depart San Francisco via Lufthansa Flight #455 Day 2 Monday, June 17 Munich / Salzburg (D) 10:45am Arrive in Frankfurt 12:15pm Depart Frankfurt via Lufthansa Flight #104 1:10pm Arrive in Munich Meet your MCI Tour Managers, Jared Fuerst, Esther Duffles and Ruth Barosch, who will assist the group to awaiting chartered motorcoaches Transfer to Salzburg Check-in to the Wyndham Grand Salzburg Conference Center Hotel 7:00pm Evening Welcome Dinner at your hotel and overnight Day 3 Tuesday, June 18 Salzburg (B) American buffet breakfast at the hotel 9:00am Enjoy a guided tour of Salzburg including Mirabell Palace and Gardens, Mozart Square, the Dom (cathedral), University Church, entrance to the Mozarthaus (Mozart's birthplace) and a cable car ride up to the Fortress (for an unparalleled view of the city below) Lunch, on own Afternoon at leisure for sightseeing, shopping or other activities Return to the hotel to change into concert clothes 5:30pm Arrive in concert dress to the University Church for rehearsal with orchestra and soloists (70 minutes) 6:40pm Break to allow audience in 7:00pm Performance at University Church in Salzburg as part of the as part of the American Celebration of Music in Austria (1 hour) 8:00pm Clear space and depart for dinner (30 minutes) Evening dinner, on own 10:00pm Return to your hotel for overnight Day 4 Wednesday, June 19 Salzburg / Kranjska Gora (B,L) 7:00am American buffet breakfast at the hotel Hotel check-out and load motorcoaches 8:00am Transfer to Burg Hochosterwitz 12:30pm Lunch at Burg Hochhosterwitz Visit Burg Hochosterwitz fortress.
    [Show full text]
  • Guide for Expatriates Zagreb
    Guide for expatriates Zagreb Update: 25/05/2013 © EasyExpat.com Zagreb, Croatia Table of Contents About us 4 Finding Accommodation, 49 Flatsharing, Hostels Map 5 Rent house or flat 50 Region 5 Buy house or flat 53 City View 6 Hotels and Bed and Breakfast 57 Neighbourhood 7 At Work 58 Street View 8 Social Security 59 Overview 9 Work Usage 60 Geography 10 Pension plans 62 History 13 Benefits package 64 Politics 16 Tax system 65 Economy 18 Unemployment Benefits 66 Find a Job 20 Moving in 68 How to look for work 21 Mail, Post office 69 Volunteer abroad, Gap year 26 Gas, Electricity, Water 69 Summer, seasonal and short 28 term jobs Landline phone 71 Internship abroad 31 TV & Internet 73 Au Pair 32 Education 77 Departure 35 School system 78 Preparing for your move 36 International Schools 81 Customs and import 37 Courses for Adults and 83 Evening Class Passport, Visa & Permits 40 Language courses 84 International Removal 44 Companies Erasmus 85 Accommodation 48 Healthcare 89 2 - Guide for expats in Zagreb Zagreb, Croatia How to find a General 90 Practitioner, doctor, physician Medicines, Hospitals 91 International healthcare, 92 medical insurance Practical Life 94 Bank services 95 Shopping 96 Mobile Phone 99 Transport 100 Childcare, Babysitting 104 Entertainment 107 Pubs, Cafes and Restaurants 108 Cinema, Nightclubs 112 Theatre, Opera, Museum 114 Sport and Activities 116 Tourism and Sightseeing 118 Public Services 123 List of consulates 124 Emergency services 127 Return 129 Before going back 130 Credit & References 131 Guide for expats in Zagreb - 3 Zagreb, Croatia About us Easyexpat.com is edited by dotExpat Ltd, a Private Company.
    [Show full text]
  • "Modern Europe, 1750–1950." a Global History of Convicts and Penal Colonies
    Gibson, Mary, and Ilaria Poerio. "Modern Europe, 1750–1950." A Global History of Convicts and Penal Colonies. Ed. Clare Anderson. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2018. 337–370. Bloomsbury Collections. Web. 29 Sep. 2021. <http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781350000704.ch-012>. Downloaded from Bloomsbury Collections, www.bloomsburycollections.com, 29 September 2021, 03:09 UTC. Copyright © Clare Anderson and Contributors 2018. You may share this work for non- commercial purposes only, provided you give attribution to the copyright holder and the publisher, and provide a link to the Creative Commons licence. 12 Modern Europe, 1750–1950 Mary Gibson and Ilaria Poerio Research on penal colonies is relatively rare in the growing historiography on European punishment. In the quest to identify the ‘birth of the prison’, – in Michel Foucault’s memorable phrase – efforts have concentrated instead on the establishment of the modern penitentiary as a symbol of European modernity.1 While debates continue about the motives for the birth of the prison, it is agreed that by the nineteenth century European nations shared an ideological commitment to replacing corporal punishment with rehabilitation through education, work, and religion in healthy and orderly institutions. European penal reformers contrasted their liberal and humanitarian vision, intended to mould useful citizens, to the supposedly backward and brutal methods of retribution that characterized the purportedly less civilized continents of Asia, Africa and Latin America. Even the transportation of convicts from European nations to their colonies has remained, until recently, more central to the histories of the non-Western world than to Europe itself. Thus a simplistic duality has marked the historiography of punishment, one that identifies the modern penitentiary with Europe (and North America) and the penal colony with the rest of the globe.
    [Show full text]
  • February 13, 1992 Volume 4, Issue 4
    February 13, 1992 Volume 4, Issue 4 His Excellency Franjo Tudjman President of the Republic of Croatia Radi ev Trg 2 41000 Zagreb Croatia Dear President Tudjman: The U.S. Helsinki Watch Committee is deeply concerned by reports of serious human rights abuses by forces responsible to the Croatian government and by individual extremists in Croatia. Our own investigations of these reports, conducted during a series of fact-finding missions to Croatia in the past year, indicate that many of these reports are well-founded. We call upon you to investigate the abuses enumerated in this letter and to punish those responsible for them. We call upon you to take immediate measures to ensure that such violations of human rights do not occur again. The abuses described in this letter include violations of the laws of war in the current conflict between Croatian and Serbian forces and the Yugoslav army, including the summary execution of civilians and disarmed combatants; the torture and mistreatment of detainees; arbitrary arrests and disappearances; destruction of civilian property and the killing of journalists covering the war. In addition to violations connected with the war, Helsinki Watch has also documented restrictions on freedom of expression and the press and interference with the independence of the judiciary. Finally, we are gravely concerned about the harassment, discrimination and rising violence against Serbs not engaged in the armed conflict in Croatia. Rules of War Violations in Croatia by Croatian Forces Violations of the rules of war are often committed by local police officers and members of the Croatian army1 in areas which are under heavy siege by Serbian forces and the Yugoslav army.
    [Show full text]
  • The Re-Elaboration of Fascism and Its Impact on Right-Wing Populism In
    National Past and Populism: The Re-Elaboration of Fascism and Its Impact on Right-Wing Populism in Western Europe Daniele Caramani and Luca Manucci Department of Political Science University of Zurich Affolternstrasse 56 8050 Zurich Switzerland Email: [email protected] / [email protected] Phone: 0041 44 630 4010 Web: www.ipz.uzh.ch Abstract: The electoral performance of right-wing populism also depends on the type of re-elaboration of countries’ national past and their collective memories. Complementing socio-economic and political-institutional factors, the paper analyses cultural opportunity structures. Given the link between fascist and populist visions of power, it shows that different collective memories of the fascist past and World War II may open up or close down the space for right-wing populist parties. Theoretically, the typology includes four types of re-elaboration: culpabilization, victimization, heroization and cancellation. Results of a comparative analysis of eight West European countries based on a novel measurement method point to (1) culpabilization and heroization as types of re-elaboration limiting right-wing populist parties’ electoral performance, (2) cancellation as a type having an undetermined effect, and (3) victimization as a type triggering the success of right-wing populist parties. Keywords: populism, fascist past, re-elaboration, collective memory, cultural opportunity structures, comparative. 2 Introduction The success of Alternative for Germany in the 2017 federal elections came to many as a shock. Germany is a country that dealt critically with its past and developed a political culture making it unthinkable that right-wing populist discourses and parties would establish themselves.
    [Show full text]
  • Fascism on Display: the Afterlife of Material Legacies of the Dictatorship Flaminia Bartolini
    Print: ISBN 978-1-78969-873-2 Online: ISSN 2531-8810 EX NOVO Journal of Archaeology, Volume 5, December 2020: 19-32 19 Published Online: Dec 2020 Fascism on display: the afterlife of material legacies of the dictatorship Flaminia Bartolini McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research; Cambridge Heritage Research Centre, University of Cambridge Abstract The year 2015 marked the seventy-fifth anniversary of the end of World War II, a commemoration that prompted Italy to reconsider the complexity of the Fascist phenomenon and how the artistic creations and urbanism of the regime contributed to shaping city landscapes across the country. Fascist material legacies are an unequivocal presence in any Italian city, but the ways in which they have been preserved or not, reused or abandoned, provokes consideration of the complexities of the country’s renegotiation of its Fascist past, shifting from iconoclasm to present-day heritage status. Heritage designation and the restoration of Fascist works of art and architecture have posed questions regarding selectivity in heritage and whether Italy has yet to come to terms with its Fascist past. This paper will look at how Italy’s approach to Fascist heritage, which has recently been framed as ‘difficult heritage’ following Macdonald’s work on Nazi Germany, is an expression of the conflicting narratives that surround any renegotiation of the Fascist past, and how some recent conservation projects and exhibition have failed to demonstrate reflexivity over Fascism. It will also deconstruct the role of restoration and the heritage practices of preservation and management and will question the link between conservation and changes of attitude regarding a ‘difficult’ past.
    [Show full text]
  • Većeslav Holjevac – Forgotten Dissident
    94 Prispevki za novejšo zgodovino LVIII – 3/2018 1.01 UDC : 929HOLJEVAC V.:323.281»1918/1945« Josip Mihaljević* Većeslav Holjevac – Forgotten Dissident IZVLEČEK VEĆESLAV HOLJEVAC – POZABLJENI DISIDENT Hrvaški politik Većeslav Holjevac (1917–1970) velja za enega najuspešnejših županov mesta Zagreb. Kljub temu sta njegova osebnost in politično delo javnosti danes malo znana. Njegove zasluge na kulturnem področju so šle večinoma v pozabo, prav tako pa tudi dejstvo, da je bil edenn najpomembnejših hrvaških disidentov. Njegov primer razkriva vprašanje hrvaškega gibanja za nacionalno reformo, znanega pod imenom Hrvaška pomlad. Zaradi močnega značaja ga ni bilo strah braniti lastnih stališč celo v bojih s tovariši komunisti, ki so zasedali pomembnejše funkcije v hierarhiji Zveze komunistov Jugoslavije, kar je povzročilo njegov politični zaton. Članek predstavlja ključne trenutke njegovih disidentskih in politič- nih nesoglasij s tovariši, zaradi katerih si je v partiji prislužil status odpadnika. Prav tako obravnava trditve, da naj bi Holjevac postal vodja Hrvaške pomladi. Ključne besede: Većeslav Holjevac, disident, Zveza komunistov Jugoslavije, Komunistična partija Hrvaške, Hrvaška pomlad ABSTRACT Croatian politician Većeslav Holjevac (1917–1970) has been remembered as one of the most successful mayors of the city of Zagreb. However, his character and political work are scarcely known to the public today. His merits in the cultural sphere are mostly forgotten, as well as the fact that he was one of the most important Croatian dissidents. His case deli- neates the issue of the Croatian national reform movement known as the Croatian Spring. Due to his solid character he was not afraid to defend his standpoints, even in the fights with communist comrades who were higher in the hierarchy of the League of Communists * Research Fellow, PhD, Croatian Institute of History, Opatička 10, 10000-Zagreb, Croatia, [email protected] Josip Mihaljević: Većeslav Holjevac – Forgotten Dissident 95 of Yugoslavia, which caused his political decline.
    [Show full text]
  • Fondazione Internazionale Trieste Per Il Progresso E La Libertà Delle Scienze and SISSA Interdisciplinary Laboratory
    EUROPEAN CITY OF SCIENCE 2020 Freedom for Science, Science for Freedom 1 FREEDOM FOR SCIENCE, SCIENCE FOR FREEDOM Dear Dr. Tindemans I would like to express again the support of the Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research – MIUR – to the candidature of Trieste to host the Euro Science Open forum (ESOF) in 2020. The candidature is solid and the proposed PROESOF2020 program, with the specifc goal of promoting discussion and deepening European scientifc collaboration ahead of the opening of ESOF is an unprecedented initiative represents an added value to the Valeria Fedeli proposal. Minister of Instruction, University and Research The motto “Freedom for Science, Science for Freedom”, is a refection of our times. Not only does it apply to the modern age, but it also provides guidance in the face of rapidly changing societies resulting from technological advancements and innovations, and Trieste, for it’s very well known high concentration of national and international Scientifc Institutions, functioning both as institutes of higher education as well as science and technology parks for high level research, and for both geographic and historical reasons, could not be a more ftting city to be named the European City of Science. Euro Science Open Forum would surely gain extra visibility and play an unprecedented role in the integration of Europe and in the relations between Europe and the Far-East and the South Mediterranean, and we believe that, with all its outreach and scientifc opportunities, ESOF 2020 would represent a milestone in Italy’ events to promote the role of science in society in a European context.
    [Show full text]