- Author:
Hanna Wiczanowska
- Institution:
Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu
- Year of publication:
2016
- Source:
Show
- Pages:
330-348
- DOI Address:
https://doi.org/10.15804/siip201617
- PDF:
siip/15/siip1517.pdf
Memory rights in the context of article 17 ECHR – right to negationism or negationism of the memory rights?
The objective of the article hereto is to present the mechanisms of the memory rights’ protection within the Strasbourg system, based upon the literal resonance of the European Convention of Human Rights and judicial practice of the European Court of Human Rights. Such topic will be subjected to analysis through the legal-dogmatic method which relies upon the construction of the concrete provisions of the Convention as well as jurisprudence of ECHR. The basic hypothesis of the author is the existence of the double standards of memory rights’ protection against negationism, depending from the type of denied memory right.
- Author:
Marcin Zaborski
- Institution:
SWPS University
- ORCID:
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9746-9670
- Year of publication:
2023
- Source:
Show
- Pages:
60-79
- DOI Address:
https://doi.org/10.15804/athena.2023.80.04
- PDF:
apsp/80/apsp8004.pdf
How does Yad Vashem Institute presents the stories of the youngest participants in the war? What role do children play in its narrative? Do the authors of the exhibition devote separate exhibition to them – or are the children’s fates ‘inscribed’ in the overall message about history? Is the death of victims or the death of heroes at the centre of the message? Is the museum presentation dedicated to specific, individual figures or rather to communities of anonymous participants in wartime events? The author of the article addresses those questions by analysing the narrative line of the Holocaust History Museum (Yad Vashem) in Jerusalem. The research conducted show that the Holocaust story presented in this place focuses on the loss and suffering that resulted in interrupted lives. The perspective of the victims dominates the exhibition analysed. The civilian victims of occupation and Genocide are at the centre of the exhibition.