Dealing with the Past – Erinnerung und Aufarbeitung nach Systemumbrüchen im späten 20. Jahrhundert

Dealing with the Past – Erinnerung und Aufarbeitung nach Systemumbrüchen im späten 20. Jahrhundert

Organizer
Der Beauftragte der Bundesregierung für die neuen Bundesländer, Bundesstiftung zur Aufarbeitung der SED-Diktatur
ZIP
10117
Location
Berlin
Country
Germany
From - Until
18.08.2021 - 19.08.2021
By
Bundesstiftung zur Aufarbeitung der SED-Diktatur

Dealing with the Past – Erinnerung und Aufarbeitung nach Systemumbrüchen im späten 20. Jahrhundert

Erinnerung und Aufarbeitung weltweit! Bei der Online-Konferenz werden Systemumbrüche und unterschiedliche Formen des Umgangs mit der Vergangenheit durch internationale Gäste aus verschiedenen nationalen und historischen Blickwinkeln erörtert.

Die Konferenz, die die Bundesstiftung zur Aufarbeitung der SED-Diktatur gemeinsam mit dem Beauftragten der Bundesregierung für die neuen Bundesländer organisiert, wird in deutscher und englischer Sprache als Livestream auf YouTube verfügbar sein.

Dealing with the Past – Memory and Reconciliation after Regime Changes in the late 20th Century

The online conference is dedicated to an international comparative perspective on the historical and current questions of regime changes as well as to the collective processes of reconciliation that follow them. The conference, which is organized by the Federal Foundation for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Eastern Germany together with the Federal Government Commissioner for the New Federal States, addresses and discusses different approaches of transitional justice in an international perspective. The conference will be available in German and English as a livestream on YouTube.

Dealing with the Past – Erinnerung und Aufarbeitung nach Systemumbrüchen im späten 20. Jahrhundert

Das 20. Jahrhundert war weltweit geprägt von der Auseinandersetzung zwischen Freiheit und Tyrannei, zwischen Demokratie und Diktatur. Nach dem Ende des Zweiten Weltkriegs bestimmte der Ost-West-Konflikt in entscheidendem Maße die Weltpolitik. Linke wie rechte Diktaturen, autoritäre Regime und demokratische Staaten standen in einem komplexen Beziehungs- und Abgrenzungsverhältnis zueinander. Die Umbrüche in Europa, Lateinamerika, Südostasien und Teilen Afrikas mit dem Ende von Kolonialregimen und dem Ende des Kalten Kriegs läuteten ein neues Zeitalter ein. Es war verbunden mit politischen Systemwechseln in vielen Staaten der Welt. Nach dem Ende von Diktaturen, bewaffneten Konflikten und Kriegen stehen die betroffenen Länder und Gesellschaften vor vielfältigen Aufgaben. Dabei geht es zum einen um den Aufbau neuer politischer und gesellschaftlicher Strukturen. Zum anderen stehen all diese Gesellschaften in ihren Transformationsphasen auch vor der wichtigen Frage, wie mit der konflikthaften Vergangenheit umzugehen ist.

Die Online-Konferenz widmet sich in international vergleichender Perspektive der stets aktuellen Frage nach Systemumbrüchen sowie Aufarbeitungsprozessen und -modellen in unterschiedlichen historischen und nationalen Kontexten.

Die Konferenz wird in deutscher und englischer Sprache als Livestream auf dem YouTube-Kanal der Bundesstiftung Aufarbeitung verfügbar sein.

Link zum Livestream am 18. August: https://youtu.be/loSqavD2teI
Link zum Livestream am 19. August: https://youtu.be/vgdC9hh8tN0

Dealing with the Past – Memory and Reconciliation after Regime Changes in the late 20th Century

The 20th century was an age of worldwide struggle between freedom and tyranny, democracy and dictatorship. After the Second World War, the East-West conflict decisively influenced world politics. Left-wing and right-wing dictatorships, authoritarian regimes and democratic states maintained complex relationships with each other. The upheavals in Europe, Latin America, Southeast Asia and parts of Africa with the end of colonial regimes and the end of the Cold War heralded a new era. It was associated with changes in the political systems of many countries of the world. Following the end of dictatorships, armed conflicts, and wars, the affected countries and societies have to confront a wide range of challenges. On the one hand, they need to establish new political and social structures. On the other hand, all these societies are facing the important question of how to deal with their conflict-ridden past.

The conference „Dealing with the Past – Memory and Reconciliation after Regime Changes in the late 20th Century“ is dedicated to an international comparative perspective on the historical and current questions of regime changes as well as to the collective processes of reconciliation that follow them. The conference addresses and discusses different approaches of transitional justice in an international perspective.

The conference livestream will be available in German and English.
To the livestream, August 18: https://youtu.be/sk7PnWiMhOs
To the livestream, August 19: https://youtu.be/tS5B07udXzs

Programm

Das Programm in deutscher Sprache finden Sie auf unserer Website.

WEDNESDAY, August 18, 2021

15:00 – 15:15 Welcome Address and introduction: Dr Anna Kaminsky, Federal Foundation for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Eastern Germany, Berlin

15:15 – 16:00 Keynote and discussion: A Brief History of Regime Changes in the late 20th Century

Repressive state regimes can end in very different ways: reform processes from above can cause them, peaceful or violent revolutions, civil wars or armed conflicts. The form of the regime change is thereby formative for the development of new sustainable political structures and for the social reconciliation processes that is accepted by a majority of the population. The lecture will give an overview of the regime changes in different countries and compare them with each other: How did the regime changes take place in particular countries? Were they violent or peaceful? What effects did the course of the regime change have on the societies in these countries today?

Keynote by Prof Dr Jan Eckel, University of Tübingen
Discussion moderated by Harald Asel, rbb Inforadio, Berlin

16:00 – 17:30 Panel I: Times of Upheaval: Regime Changes in an International Perspective

The questions raised in the lecture will be discussed in more detail on the podium with a view to different geographical areas: How did the system changes of the second half of the 20th century take place in the different world regions? Which role did historical contexts, internal and external factors play? What strategies were chosen for a social new start? What approaches and principles globally existed for democratic and social reforms? What similarities and differences can we distinguish between the various regime changes in an international comparison, for example with regard to the aftermaths of the downfall of communism or the processes of decolonization? As how successful can the regime changes in the different regions and countries be classified from today's perspective?

Participants:

Prof Dr Aurel Croissant, Heidelberg University
Prof Dr Sabine Kurtenbach, GIGA Institute for Latin American Studies, Hamburg
Prof Dr Carola Lentz, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
Prof Dr Gwendolyn Sasse, Centre for East European and International Studies, Berlin
Moderation: Harald Asel, rbb Inforadio, Berlin

17:30 – 18:00 Break

18:00 – 19:30 Panel II: Broken System—Broken Society? International Perspectives on Experiences of Transformation

The collapse of the political system not only manifests in the societies but also in the biographies of its people. For many of them, the experiences of upheaval meant deep personal cutbacks that often turned their previous life plans upside down—regardless of how their stance on the regime had previously been. The podium would like to look at the concrete experiences of people between new beginnings and changes, between personal hopes, disappointments and successes. Which influence did the regime changes have on the societies of the different countries? What did the collapse of a dictatorship and the establishment of a new political system mean for the individual? Were breaks in biographies a collective experience? What impact do these experiences have on contemporary society? How can we deal with them?

Participants:

Dr Ulrike Capdepón, University of Konstanz
Marina Frenk, Author, Berlin
Prof Dr Steffen Mau, Humboldt University of Berlin
Dr Khulu Mbatha, Special Advisor to the President of South Africa, Pretoria
Moderation: Michaela Küfner, Deutsche Welle, Berlin

THURSDAY, August 19, 2021

10:00 – 10:45 Keynote and discussion: The Right to Truth: Right or Justice? Revenge or Reconciliation? Coming to Terms or Offsetting?

With the end of dictatorship and tyranny, the countries chose different ways of dealing with the past. These include not only national or international court proceedings to punish perpetrators, but also different instruments and mechanisms aimed at establishing justice and reconciliation between the former conflict parties: amnesties, public access to files, lustration, rehabilitation and compensation of victims. The lecture compares different types of historical reappraisal processes and explains why the respective path was chosen. It discusses their political and legal aspects as well as the associated political truth and inquiry commissions conflicts and goals.

Keynote by Dr Rainer Huhle, Nuremberg Human Rights Center

Discussion moderated by Tamina Kutscher, dekoder.org, Hamburg

10:45 – 12:30 Panel I: From the Shadow of the Past into the Light of Reappraisal

Representatives of civil society initiatives and memorial sites as well as experts from different countries will meet on the podium. They will give an insight into different forms and aspects of the social and legal processes of coming to terms with the past as well as in the development of the culture of remembrance in their own countries. The aim is to take stock of the status quo of reconciliation with the past and of future expectations and challenges: How are we dealing with the process of reconciliation today? What effects from the coping processes can we see in these countries today? What dangers existed for the course of reconciliation? What results have been achieved? Which corrections had possibly been made? Similarities and differences between the countries are compared and pointed out.

Participants:

Dr Rosario Figari Layús, Justus Liebig University of Giessen
Prof Dr Axel Klausmeier, Berlin Wall Foundation
Dr Nikita Vasilyevich Petrov, International Memorial, Moscow
Prof Dr Jhy-Wey Shieh, Representative of Taiwan in Germany
Moderation: Tamina Kutscher, dekoder.org, Hamburg

12:30 – 13:30 Break

13:30 – 15:30 Panel II: No Ending in Dealing with the Past? Or: the Future of Dealing with the Past

The concluding panel will summarize the findings of the international comparison and discuss how approaches from other countries could be transferred, but also where the limits of comparability lie. Furthermore, the panel will focus on the tasks and challenges that need to be addressed today: How, for example, do we deal with state prevention of the process of coming to terms with the past or the request for a 'clean break'? What lessons from history can we transfer to the present and what answers can our democratic societies give to the authoritarian temptations of the time? What function does historical reappraisal still have in democratic societies?

Participants:

Dr Radka Denemarková, Author, Prague
Prof Dr Luís Farinha, Aljube Museum Resistance and Freedom, Lisbon
Bartholomäus Grill, Journalist and author, Cape Town
Markus Meckel, Federal Foundation for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Eastern Germany, Berlin
Dr Meelis Maripuu, Estonian Institute of Historical Memory, Tallinn
Moderation: Dr Jacqueline Boysen, Journalist and author, Berlin

Contact (announcement)

conference@bundesstiftung-aufarbeitung.de

https://www.bundesstiftung-aufarbeitung.de/de/veranstaltungen/internationale-konferenz-dealing-past
Editors Information
Published on
17.06.2021
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English, German
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