| Cassin, René (1887-1976) |
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Meanwhile, he made extensive contributions to legal scholarship, writing technical treatises on contracts, inheritance, the conception of domicile, and the inequality between men and women in civil legislation; he also published dozens of articles, many of topical concern, such as those dealing with aspects of human rights. Cassin has been an
administrator of academic affairs as well. For the embryonic French government-in-exile
during World War II, he was the commissioner of public instruction. With
the liberation of France in 1945, he became president of the Council of
the National School of Administration [Conseil de l'école nationale d'administration]
and in 1960 president of the French National Overseas Center of Advanced
Studies [Centre national des hautes-études de la France d'outre-mer]. After World War I,
Cassin devised practical outlets for his humanitarian instincts. In 1918
he founded the French Federation of Disabled War Veterans (L'Union fédérale
des associations des mutilés et d'anciens combattants) and until 1940
served it in the capacity of president or of honorary president. To benefit
children orphaned by the war, he accepted the office of vice president
of the High Council for Wards of the Nation [Conseil superieur des pupilles
de la nation]. In 1926 he founded and until the outbreak of World War
II was the permanent reporter for the International Conference of Associations
of Disabled War Veterans [Conference internationale des associations de
mutilés et d'anciens combattants]. Cassin is said to have been the first civilian to leave Bordeaux to join General de Gaulle in response to his appeal from London after the armistice of June, 1940, between Germany and the capitulating French government. A mainstay for de Gaulle, he drafted all of the legal texts of his incipient government and conducted delicate negotiations with Great Britain, including the Churchill-de Gaulle accord which became the " Charter " of the Free French forces. He held important positions - among them, permanent secretary of the Council of Defense of the Empire (1940-1941), National Commissioner of Justice and Public Instruction (1941-1943), president of the Juridical Committee of the Provisional Government (1943-1945) and vice-president of the Upper House [Haute Assemblée]; he was a delegate to the United Nations Commission on Inquiry into War Crimes (1943-1945) and chairman (1944) of the legislative committee for the Consultative Assembly set up as part of the government-in-exile in Algiers in 1943. In the period following World War II, Cassin not only occupied the judicial posts already mentioned, but also continued the international work he had begun in the League of Nations. On five occasions - 1946, 1948, 1950, 1951, 1968 - he was a French delegate to the Assembly of the United Nations, and for many years between 1945 and 1960 a delegate to the UNESCO conferences. In his work on human rights, Cassin fused his legal knowledge, his humanitarian instinct, and his belief in internationalism. He was a member of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights from its creation in 1946; vice-chairman from 1946 to 1955, a period which included Eleanor Roosevelt's chairmanship (1946-1953); chairman from 1955 to 1957; and again vice-chairman in 1959. The workhorse of the Commission, he was the one most responsible for the draft of the Declaration of Human Rights approved by the General Assembly on December 10, 1948. In a series of lectures delivered in 1951 at The Hague Academy of Intemational Law, Cassin provides a thorough discussion of the Declaration and of the early problems of drafting the Covenants: he analyzes the pertinent clauses in the Charter of the UN, the mandate of the Commission, the preparation and acceptance of the Declaration; he then provides a lawyer's insight into definition of the rights, the limitations imposed, the problems of enforcing the proposed Covenants, measures needed for the examination of possible complaints, and procedures required for international surveillance and constructive control. In an article written to mark the International Human Rights Year of 1968, Cassin concludes with a simple admonition: "Now that we possess an instrument capable of lifting or easing the burden of oppression and injustice in the world, we must learn to use it ". From Nobel Lectures, Peace 1951-1970. *René Cassin died in 1976. |