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State Crimes of Previous Regimes: Knowledge, Accountability, and the Policing of the Past

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 December 2018

Abstract

The policy of lustration is set in the context of responses to abuses of power by previous regimes. Using examples from three recent forms of social reconstruction (in Latin America, the former communist states, and South Africa), the author reviews the “justice in transition” debate. How do societies going through democratization confront the human rights violations committed by the previous regime? Five aspects of this debate are reviewed: (1) truth: establishing and confronting the knowledge of what happened in the past; (2) justice: making offenders accountable for their past violations through three possible methods: punishment through the criminal law, compensation and restitution, and mass disqualification such as lustration; (3) impunity: giving amnesty to previous offenders; (4) expiation; and (5) reconciliation and reconstruction. A concluding discussion raises the implications of the subject for the study of time and social control.

Type
Symposium: Law and Lustration: Righting the Wrongs of the Past
Copyright
Copyright © American Bar Foundation, 1995 

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References

1 These three sets of transitions have been explicitly linked in the work of the New York-based Project on Justice in Times of Transition. The lessons from the Eastern European and Latin American cases for South Africa were the subject of a conference “Justice in Transition: Dealing with the Past,” held in Cape Town in February 1994. I am grateful to the organizers, IDASA (Institute for Democracy in South Africa), for their invitation to participate. The edited discussion of this conference is an excellent introduction to all the themes of my paper. See Alex Boraine et al., eds., Dealing with the Past: Truth and Reconciliation in South Africa (Cape Town: IDASA, 1994) (“Boraine, Dedng”). Google Scholar

2 For speculation on how this revisionist literature might be relevant to societies under transition, see Stanley Cohen, “Social Control and the Politics of Reconstruction,” in D. Nelken, ed., The Futures of Criminology (London: Sage, 1994)Google Scholar

3 There is some inconsistency in the terminology. Sometimes “accountability” is used as a broad term to cover all modes of dealing with the past. Thus “truth” and “justice” are forms of accountability. Sometimes, “accountability” is used only in the narrower legal sense as synonymous with justice. My typology is based on this second, more restricted, notion.Google Scholar

4 In our context, this is what may be called the “Kurt Waldheim Syndrome.” There are two symptoms: (1) “At the time, I didn't know what was happening,” and/or (2) “I might have known at the time, but afterwards I forgot it all.” The syndrome appeared in the March 1994 Versailles trial of the French wartime collaborator, Paul Touvier. Asked whether he was aware of the Vichy government's anti-Jewish decrees, he replied, “No, I missed that.” Did he know of the mass deportations to Germany?“We didn't have television then. I didn't know about it” or “I don't remember. It was all too complicated for me.” Andrew Gumbel, “Touvier Retreats into Forgetfulness,”Gumdian, March 3, 1994.Google Scholar

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6 Much attention was given to the astonishing finding of an April 1993 Roper Poll that some 22% of a US. public opinion sample thought it was possible that the Holocaust never happened and a further 12% did not know whether it had. Later critics have shown that the questions were badly worded (through a double negative) and grossly overestimated the extent of actual denial. A later 1993 Gallup Poll found that 83% thought that the Holocaust definitely happened, 13% that it probably happened, and 4% that it did not or had no opinion. A March 1994 Roper Poll found that 1.1% of the population thought it was possible that it never happened, with 7.7% not knowing. Any denial seemed more a result of ignorance than an ideological commitment to the denial movement. On these data and interpretations, see Deborah Lipstadt's “Preface to the Paperback Edition” of her Denying the Holocawt: The Growing Assault on Truth and Memory (New York: Penguin, 1994), and “New Poll Shows only 1.1% of Americans Doubt Holocaust,”Jewish Bull., 15 July 1994.Google Scholar

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27 This criterion was also often cited to judge the new Clinton administration's foreign policy. See, e.g., Human Rights Watch World Report 1993 (New York: Human Rights Watch, 1993).Google Scholar

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30 Many Western observers were introduced to the lustration issue by Lawrence Weschler's article on the Jan Kavan case: “The Velvet Purge: The Trials of Jan Kavan,”New York, 19 Oct. 1992, at 66–96. See also Jerri Laber, “Witch Hunt in Prague,”N.Y. Rev. Bks., 23 April 1992, at 5–8. My account of the Czech story is a paraphrase of these sources.Google Scholar

31 “Czechoslovakia: ‘Decommunization’ Measures Violate Freedom of Expression and Due Process Standards,”News from Helsinki Watch, April 1992. While the standard critique of lustration is that too many people are being swept into its net, the problem with denazification in postwar Germany was that too few people were made accountable: “What had begun as a rather foolish incrimination of the entire population turned into wholesale exemptions and finally wholesale exoneration. Denazification in the end meant not purge but rehabilitation.” John H. Herz, “An Historical Perspective,” in Aspen Institute, State Crimes 18 (cited in note 18).Google Scholar

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34 Described in detail by Weschler, Miracle 83–236 (cited in note 12).Google Scholar

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37 Various sides of this debate are well presented by Juan Mendez, Aryeh Neier, and Jose Zalaquett in Boraine, Dealing 35–40 (cited in note 1).Google Scholar

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39 This is well explained in regard to African cases such as Uganda by Richard Carver, “Called to Account: How African Governments Investigate Human Rights Violations,”Africa Watch (New York, 1991).Google Scholar

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43 Aryeh Neier, “What Should be Done about the Guilty?”N.Y. Rev. Bks., 1 Feb. 1990, at 34.Google Scholar

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49 As Amos Elon notes, the subject of dealing with the recent past in East Germany is referred to as Aufarbeitung—a term derived from psychoanalysis and meaning coping or coming to terms with. Amos Elon, “East Germany: Crime and Punishment,”N.Y. Reu. Bks., 14 May 1992, at 6.Google Scholar

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52 Reprinted in N.Y. Times, 10 Oct. 1991.Google Scholar

53 Erving Goffman, Relations in Public 113 (London: Allen Lane, 1971). I am grateful to Tom Scheff for drawing my attention to the ways in which rituals of apology appear in political conflicts as forms of acknowledgment. Some of these ideas appear in Thomas J. Scheff, Bloody Revenge: Nationalism, Emotion and War (Boulder, (Colo.: Westview Press, 1993).Google Scholar

54 Albie Sachs, “Personal Accounts,” in Boraine, Dealing 20–25 (cited in note 1).Google Scholar

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63 Martin Amis's novel Time's Arrow (New York: Vintage, 1991) is a original meditation on this subject: a escaped Nazi war criminal now in the United States lives his life backward till the moment he became an Auschwitz doctor.Google Scholar

64 Elsewhere, I apply Sykes and Matza's well-known theory of neutralization to analyzing government denials of complicity in state crimes: Stanley Cohen, “Human Rights and Crimes of the State: The Culture of Denial,” 26 Australian & New Zealand J. Criminology 97 (19931.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

65 Harold Rosenberg, “The Shadow of the Furies,”N.Y. Reu. Bh., 20 Jan. 1977, at 47.Google Scholar

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69 Many commentators on the current phase of unblocking the past in totalitarian societies have celebrated the failure of the original rewriting of history. As Havel notes: “It is truly astonishing to discover how, after decades of falsified history and ideological manipulation, nothing has been forgotten.” Vaclav Havel, “The Post-Communist Nightmare,”N.Y. Rev. Bk., 27 May 1993, at 10. Future students of political violence will have to explain how current recoveries and inventions of these “memories” are used to justify nationalist and ethnic hatred.Google Scholar

70 Thus in Romania, the trial and execution of the Ceausescus and the first trials of their henchmen were more reminiscent of Stalinist show trials than the Nuremberg precedent to which they appealed. Some have claimed that the death sentences were imposed on the day before the putative trial started and that variously edited videotapes of the trial were shown. Indeed, some cynical commentators have gone as far as to claim that the whole transition was faked. See Andrei Codrexo, The Hole in the Flag: Smoke and Mirrors in the Romanian Revolution (New York: Morrow Press, 1992).Google Scholar

71 Terence de Pres, “On Governing Narratives: The Turkish-Armenian Case,” 75 Yale Rev. 517 (1986), and Gregory F. Goekjian, “Genocide and Historical Desire,” 83 Semiotica 211 (1991).Google Scholar

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73 See Amnesty International, “Morocco: Tazmanant: Official Silence and Impunity” (London: Amnesty International, Nov. 1992).Google Scholar