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Collective Memories, Institutions and Law
Author(s) -
Adam Czarnota,
Justyna Jezierska,
Michał Stambulski
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
archiwum filozofii prawa i filozofii społecznej
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2082-3304
DOI - 10.36280/afpifs.2019.3.6
Subject(s) - collective memory , relation (database) , law , sociology , politics , political science , law and economics , computer science , database
This paper aims at explaining the concepts of collective memory, institutions, politics, law, as well as relations between them. By means of a short explanation of a network of mutual relations between these notions, we want to show how law and collective memories interact and how the relation between them is formed. At the same time, we see three modes of relations between collective memories and law: 1) past before the law, 2) memory laws and 3) law as collective memory. The first view consists in evaluating the past under a court trial. The second one in creating legal rules which promote or demand commemoration of a specific vision of the past. The third approach perceives law itself as institutionalized collective memory.

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