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The Universal Declaration of Human Rights in East Germany. Socialist Appropriation and Dissident Contestation, 1948-1989

  • It would be easy to presume that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights had always been a symbol of opposition and dissent in the German Democratic Republic. Passed by the United Nations General Assembly on December 10, 1948, the UDHR contained a number of provisions that contradicted the political and social order of the GDR as run by the Socialist Unity Party (SED). It demanded an independent judiciary, prohibited arbitrary arrest and invasion of privacy, and guaranteed the right to leave one’s own country. In East Germany, where the judiciary was firmly an ideological organ, the Stasi regularly conducted mass surveillance and arbitrary detention and those seeking to leave the country illegally were shot at the border, this would seem to be a document seen to be inherently hostile to SED rule. Even the social rights contained in the UDHR, in particular the right to strike, were contrary to the legal realities of East Germany where citizens could not demand rights from the state that would obstruct the will of the party. Yet over the course of East Germany’s existence, the Universal Declaration was more likely to be invoked by the SED than by its domestic opponents. The SED came to view the Universal Declaration and the UN human rights system as a whole as an ally to the Socialist Bloc and the contents of the UDHR reflected in the achievements of socialism within the borders of the GDR. For decades this was not challenged by East Germans on a mass scale, until very suddenly in the late 1980s, human rights and the UDHR became symbols of the democratic opposition. This article will trace the trajectory of the UDHR in East German public discourse from its passage in 1948 and the reaction by the SED in the Soviet Occupied Zone, through the commemorations of the UDHR on its many anniversaries before the ultimate collapse of SED in 1989.

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Metadaten
Author:Ned Richardson-LittleORCiDGND
URL:https://zeitgeschichte-online.de/themen/universal-declaration-human-rights-east-germany
DOI:https://doi.org/10.14765/zzf.dok-2584
Parent Title (German):Dossier: Utopien im Wandel. Zur Geschichte der Menschenrechte und des Humanitarismus im 20. Jahrhundert
Publisher:ZZF - Centre for Contemporary History: Zeitgeschichte online
Place of publication:Potsdam
Document Type:Online Publication
Language:English
Date of first Publication:2018/12/07
Release Date:2023/07/30
ZZF Chronological-Classification:1970er
1950er
1960er
1945-
1980er
ZZF Regional-Classification:Europa / Westeuropa / Deutschland / DDR
ZZF Topic-Classification:Transnationale Geschichte
Global History
Internationale Organisationen
Internationale Beziehungen
Recht
Verfassung
Web-Publications:Zeitgeschichte online
(Theme) dossier(s):zeitgeschichte|online / Utopien im Wandel. Zur Geschichte der Menschenrechte und des Humanitarismus im 20. Jahrhundert
Licence (German):License LogoZZF - Clio Lizenz