Book contents
- Social Justice in Twentieth-Century Europe
- Social Justice in Twentieth-Century Europe
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Social Justice
- 2 Social Justice within a Market Society
- 3 Catholic Conceptions of Social Justice from 1891 to Pope Francis
- 4 Social Justice through Taxation?
- 5 A Fascist Social Justice?
- 6 Social Justice in Authoritarian Central Europe
- 7 Social Justice in a Socialist Society
- 8 Immigrants and Social Justice in Western Europe since the 1960s
- 9 Reimagining Peace through Social Justice in Mid- to Late Twentieth-Century Europe
- 10 Social Justice or Sexual Justice?
- 11 Equity Rules
- 12 Bridging the Void
- 13 Postscript
- Index
6 - Social Justice in Authoritarian Central Europe
Czechoslovakia under Nazism and Communism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 February 2024
- Social Justice in Twentieth-Century Europe
- Social Justice in Twentieth-Century Europe
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Social Justice
- 2 Social Justice within a Market Society
- 3 Catholic Conceptions of Social Justice from 1891 to Pope Francis
- 4 Social Justice through Taxation?
- 5 A Fascist Social Justice?
- 6 Social Justice in Authoritarian Central Europe
- 7 Social Justice in a Socialist Society
- 8 Immigrants and Social Justice in Western Europe since the 1960s
- 9 Reimagining Peace through Social Justice in Mid- to Late Twentieth-Century Europe
- 10 Social Justice or Sexual Justice?
- 11 Equity Rules
- 12 Bridging the Void
- 13 Postscript
- Index
Summary
This chapter seeks to illustrate from the bottom up the role that social justice played in establishing and maintaining authoritarian rule in Czechoslovakia under National Socialism and state socialism. The author investigates how notions of social justice were included in the social practice of both regimes and how the working population responded to these policies. By analysing legal disputes, this chapter explores the critical space between rulers and ruled to assess when and how notions of social justice were articulated in Czechoslovakia. In their opposition to the ‘injustices’ of past governments, such as those wrought by social inequality and economic suffering, both National Socialists and Communists drew on a language of social justice to articulate their own visions of a new order. However, their respective notions of social justice differed radically: from social justice defined in racial terms, typical for New Order movements, to social justice delimited by social class and attained for all members of the ‘socialist working society’. The main difference that emerged from the transition from the Nazi to the post-war Communist regime was a shift from the language of individual rights to a language related to the collective, to society, and to the state.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Social Justice in Twentieth-Century Europe , pp. 116 - 138Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024