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Herman Diederiks (9 October 1937, Rotterdam – 11 August 1995, Ardèche) was a Dutch historian who specialized in crime and justice history in the Netherlands. In 1978, he was one of the founders of the International Association for the History of Crime and Criminal Justice (IAHCCJ). ==Life== Diederiks joined the department of economic and social history of the University of Leiden around 1970, at a time when it was common in Dutch academia to hire people for teaching who would complete their PhD later. He soon became secretary of the history section of the national Academic Council. In 1973, he and Sjoerd Faber founded the Dutch Group for the Study of Penal History - an informal and diverse group of scholars and Ph.D. students who regularly met in order to discuss each other's work. In 1977, the Dutch Group organized the first international conference on the history of crime and justice, held in Amsterdam and Leiden. The next year, under the aegis of the Maison des Sciences de l'Homme, Paris, Herman, together with Maurice Aymard and Pieter Spierenburg, founded the International Association for the History of Crime and Criminal Justice. In 1982 Diederiks defended his dissertation at the University of Amsterdam. It was published as ''Een stad in verval: Amsterdam omstreeks 1800, demografisch, economisch, ruimtelijk (A city in decline: Amsterdam around 1800, demographic and economic space)''. This quantitative urban study was characteristic of his scholarly approach: he chose to focus not on Amsterdam's greatness, but on a period of decline, believing that such a focus could yield useful insights. He contributed to collective volumes and journals, publishing articles on aspects of crime and justice history in both Dutch and English. In 1992 he published ''In een land van justitie: Criminaliteit van vrouwen, soldaten en ambtenaren in de 18e-eeuwse Republiek (In a land of justice: Criminality of women, soldiers and civil servants in the eighteenth-century Dutch Republic)''. His major efforts continued to be directed at establishing scholarly contacts all over the world. Already by the early 1980s he got the nickname "The Flying Dutchman". Throughout the 1980s and the first half of the 1990s he was the force behind several international conferences in crime and justice history, as well as annual colloquia in the Maison des Sciences de l'Homme. During a bicycle ride in the Ardèche in August 1995, Diederiks fell from a bridge. Although the incident did not seem serious, it developed that he had a weak spot in his aorta, which led to his death. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Herman Diederiks」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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