April 13, 1950
| Version v1
Historic data source
Open
Camp d'internement en Indochine
DataCite XML Export
<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?> <resource xmlns="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4 http://schema.datacite.org/meta/kernel-4.3/metadata.xsd"> <creators> <creator> <creatorName nameType="Organizational">Direction de la Police et de la Sûreté fédérales</creatorName> </creator> </creators> <titles> <title>Camp d'internement en Indochine</title> </titles> <publisher>hasdai dpc</publisher> <publicationYear>1950</publicationYear> <dates> <date dateType="Issued">1950-04-13</date> </dates> <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Other"></resourceType> <rightsList> <rights rightsURI="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode" rightsIdentifierScheme="spdx" rightsIdentifier="cc-by-4.0">Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International</rights> </rightsList> <descriptions> <description descriptionType="Abstract">This record is part of a group of data resources tracing European persons who were resident or serving in East Asia during the early 20th century and who were displaced as a result of national border changes and conflicts. It is one component of Divisive Power of Citizenship—a project of the Institute for European Global Studies, Basel.The first attached dataset (Camp_d'internement_en_Indochine_persons) contains information about 36 individuals who were interned often after the Japanese coup d'État and their respective Internment camps. The second attached dataset (Camp_d'internement_en_Indochine_camps) includes information on the internment camps. Not transcript, but within the source material are also further descriptions of the location and regime of the individual sites. Original documents now held at the Archives Nationales d'Outre Mer - Mairie d'Aix-en-Provence, were compiled on the 13th of April 1950.Multiple datasets generated from the source material, including transcriptions of person entries (names, dates of birth and death where available, profession and often location, remarks and operating unit) and structured person instance data derived from them are provided. Key historic person instance information (appearances in documents), serialized as JSON according to a formal schema is available, together with the JSON Schema itself. This is intended for use by external applications, and can also be searched interactively using a DPCL presentation website (see below) which explains the datasets further. In contrast to transcription data, which represents the printed and hand-written source material, and is often organized inconsistently, the historic person instance data provided here enables reliable searching across multiple archival sources. The historic person instance JSON is lightweight to enable scalability across large numbers of sub-collections/archives: it does not contain all of the information sometimes transcribed, such as remarks and military operating unit. However it does provide IIIF canvas IDs, connecting the person instance to the page in the source document where it originally occurred.Where annotations can be generated from transcriptions they are provided as Web Annotation Data Model (WADM) annotation collections serialized as JSON, which are linked to source documents via PIDs. The annotation data can be used independently with the IIIF service provided here, to connect person instances interactively to their occurrence in the source documents. Provided principally for analysis preservation and verification purposes, the transcription data is less suitable for automated searching than the historic person instance JSON (above).These datasets are also deposited in the Zenodo global catch-all repository as record DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.6815070. A project website at https://www.divisive-power.org/ offers case studies well as search facilities which have access to all of the DPCL datasets, and additionally to other Divisive Power of Citizenship datasets.This work is funded by Swiss National Science Foundation grant 100011_184860/1 "Divisive Power of Citizenship"</description> </descriptions> </resource>