Gaston Jèze

Gaston Jèze (March 2, 1869, Toulouse August 5, 1953, Deauville) was a French academic, humanitarian and human rights activist. He was a professor of public law and the resident of the International Law Institute.

During the 1930s, he served as legal counsel to Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, who had been deposed and exiled by the Italian Fascists. During World War II, he spoke out against the persecution of Jews and other minorities by Vichy France.

A renowned academic

He was a leading proponent of and was largely responsible for promoting the establishment of finance as a separate discipline in the universities of France. He contributed to the shift in thinking from the notion of "power in the public sphere" to the idea of "public service".

A specialist in public finance and administrative law, Jèze was one of the first academics to author a study of legal phenomena such as financial phenomena that takes into account all factors, whether legal, economic, financial, social or political .

In his work, he promoted the need for a careful and rational scientific study of the "facts" of a case or situation, carefully separated from the political points of view(s) inevitably taken.

In economics, he is recognized as having made the public finances a real branch of economic analysis, especially through his "law of equilibrium", often called the "law of Jèze".

Politics

During the 1919 elections, Jeze stood unsuccessfully as a candidate in Guadeloupe for the Colonial Socialist Party. He subsequently left politics completely.

In his academic work, Jèze, strongly and effectively made the case for democracy over authoritarian rule. Despite his belief in the superiority of democracy over dictatorship, he was no shallow and conformist ideologue, and his positions were deep, insightful and nuanced. According to him, "the benefits of democracy are mostly formal, that is to say related to the public and adversarial procedure that accompanies the decision."

He was a liberal and supporter of the Third Republic, but he did not hesitate to criticize the mistakes and "demagoguery" of governments, and he had little regard for the professional political bureaucracy of his time. In 1933, Jèze, with other noted academics Capitant Rene, Rene Cassin and Georges Ripert, became one of the first great French jurists to protest the anti-Semitic, racist and corporatist Nazi regime.

Counsel to the Emperor of Ethiopia

In 1933 Monsieur Jèze became internationally renowned (outside of academic circles) for becoming the Legal Counsel to the Emperor of Ethiopia who was, at the time, negotiating with the Italian Fascists who wanted more favorable trading and residence rights for Italian citizens.

The Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini who secretly wanted to expand the Italian Empire by conquering Ethiopia used the negotiations to make demands unfavourable to Ethiopia and its citizens, which could not be feasibly met, as a pretext to move troops to the Ethiopian border.

The Italians, who had ulterior motives, consistently rebuffed all attempts at serious and equitable negotiations and thus having their demands predictably rejected by the Emperor, on Jèze's advice, declared war in 1935.

It was the start of the brutal Second Italo-Abyssinian War, during which the Italians committed numerous war crimes including the use of biological weapons. Following the war, Ethiopia became an Italian colony for the next 5 years and the emperor was exiled to London. Jèze remained the Emperor's legal Counsel until 1939.

During the negotiating period, he thus became the symbol of law and anticolonialism because of his oratory for and his championing of the Ethiopian cause before the Permanent Court of International Justice in The Hague.

His advocacy made him simultaneously became a target of right- wing nationalist organizations in France and abroad. Notably, on March 5, 1936, the French nationalist groups organised their biggest demonstration to date, demanding his resignation. That caused Jèze to hide throughout his stay in The Hague to avoid being the target of an assassination.

A notable participant in the demonstrations was François Mitterrand, a future leftwing socialist president of France.

References

Notable Works

(IN FRENCH)

Citations

(IN FRENCH)

References

(IN FRENCH)

  1. M. Milet, La Faculté de droit de Paris face à la vie politique : de l'affaire Scelle à l'affaire Jèze, 1925-1936, LGDJ, 1996
  2. G. Jèze, L'influence de Léon Duguit sur le droit administratif français, in Archives de philosophie du droit, 1932, p. 135-151
  3. G. Jèze, Le dogme de la volonté nationale et la technique politique, in Revue de droit public, 1927, p. 165
  4. M. Milet, La Faculté de droit..., op. cit.
  5. D. Lochak, La doctrine sous Vichy ou Les mésaventures du positivisme, in Les usages sociaux du droit, CURAPP-PUF, 1989, p. 252 : http://www.anti-rev.org/textes/Lochak89a/ [archive]
  6. G. Jèze, La définition légale du juif au sens des incapacités légales, in Revue de droit public, 1944, p. 74
  7. G. Jèze, "Les libertés individuelles", Annuaire de l'institut international de droit public, 1929, p. 180
  8. O. Négrin, « Une légende fiscale : la définition de l'impôt de Gaston Jèze », in Revue de droit public, 2008, n° 1, p. 119-131
  9. Cours de finances publiques 1936-1937, LGDJ, 1937, p. 38
  10. G. Jèze, "Les libertés individuelles", op. cit., p. 180
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