Description du projet
Enquêter sur la complicité dans les violations des droits de l’homme
La justice transitionnelle désigne un ensemble de processus et de mécanismes destinés à garantir la responsabilité, à rendre justice et à favoriser la réconciliation pour les victimes de conflits et d’abus antérieurs. Il existe cependant une «zone grise», une situation complexe dans laquelle des individus ont été témoins, collaborateurs ou ont retiré un bénéfice de violences, mais ont réussi à échapper à l’examen des institutions de justice transitionnelle. Le projet GREYZONE, financé par le CER, étudiera la zone grise et analysera les conséquences politiques qui découlent de la méconnaissance de la complicité dans la violence à plus grande échelle. Le projet se concentrera sur quatre cas distincts: l’autoritarisme et l’occupation militaire sous le régime de Vichy en France, l’apartheid en Afrique du Sud, le totalitarisme en Roumanie de 1945 à 1989 et la dictature militaire en Argentine de 1976 à 1983.
Objectif
The grey zone of bystanders, collaborators and beneficiaries of violence escapes the scope of main Transitional Justice (TJ) institutions and poses tough questions for scholars and architects of post-conflict societies. This interdisciplinary project shifts the focus of academic and political debates by pursuing three objectives: conceptually, it departs from the dominant victim-perpetrator paradigm and theorises the many faces in the grey zone by analysing the interplay between structure and agency; normatively, it argues that no account of TJ is complete without engaging the grey zone; empirically, it tests if, in tackling the grey zone, cinematographic and literary representations can supplement typical TJ mechanisms (trials, truth commissions, lustration). Four cases are analysed: authoritarianism plus military occupation (Vichy France), apartheid (South Africa), totalitarianism (Romania 1945–1989) and military dictatorship (Argentina 1976–1983). The cases provide a variety of contexts of complicity and feature the most frequently used TJ mechanisms. They serve to a) examine the relationship between the official story emerging from state-orchestrated TJ mechanisms and artistic narratives of complicity; b) contextually distinguish disclosive from obscuring artistic representations of the grey zone; c) explore the contribution of these representations to TJ efforts by studying their effect on public debates about—and institutional responses to—the past. Working at the frontiers between political science, philosophy, history, law, literature and cinema, this pioneering project has critical and institutional impact. Critically, it discloses the limits of current TJ theory and practice by emphasising the negative political effects of ignoring general complicity in violence. Institutionally, it seeks to enrich the toolkit of scholars and practitioners by pointing to the potential use of cinema and literature in civic education aimed at deterrence and reconciliation.
Champ scientifique
Programme(s)
Thème(s)
Régime de financement
ERC-STG - Starting GrantInstitution d’accueil
EH8 9YL Edinburgh
Royaume-Uni