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CIOBANU, MONICA (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   086257


Criminalising the past and reconstructing collective memory: Romanian truth commission / Ciobanu, Monica   Journal Article
Ciobanu, Monica Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract This article analyses the report issued by the Presidential Commission for the Analysis of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania in January 2007 within the context of the politics of memory and justice in post-communist Romania. Crucial aspects of the work of the commission, such as its history and formation, mandate and make-up, methodological and conceptual framework, and the political reactions that it generated are examined. This leads to the conclusion that while the publication of the report brought some progress in revealing the truth, it is less likely to have a similar impact on transitional justice policies. * A shorter version of this article was presented in October 2007 at the conference 'The Dream Factory of Communism' organised by Havighurst Center for Russian and Post-Soviet Studies at Miami University, Ohio. The field work was funded by the Presidential Research Award and supported by the Institute for Ethics in Public Life at Plattsburgh State University of New York. I would also like to thank Lavinia Stan for her useful comments on an earlier version of the article.
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2
ID:   134595


Reconstructing the history of early communism and armed resistance in Romania / Ciobanu, Monica   Article
Ciobanu, Monica Article
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Summary/Abstract This article examines the role played by the armed resistance in Romania during the period of Sovietisation and Stalinisation (1944–1962) and its significance within the politics of memory and justice after 1989. One conclusion of the analysis is that opposing interpretations by political actors each in search of legitimacy correspond to attempts to manufacture plausible narratives of the specific historical discontinuity posed by the revolutionary break of 1989. A second conclusion reveals how memory and identity conflicts at group and individual levels can easily result in the translation of historical myths into enduring historical facts.
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