Civil Status and Identification in Nineteenth-Century France: A Matter of State Control?

In Rosental Paul-André (ed.), Registration and Recognition: Documenting the Person in World History. pp. 137 (2012)
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Abstract

Civil status, and particularly birth certificates, rather than identity papers, are the legal basis of identification in France. Its nineteenth-century history presents a complex picture, which cannot be reduced to a process of increasing state control. Far from implementing ambitious registration projects, French liberal administration left information scattered and scarce as compared to European standards. It had to find a balance between the need to provide open information in order to minimize uncertainty in social and economic relationships, and the protection of personal and family honour and reputation. Citizens' agency and consent have been determinant in this process, whose traces are still visible in contemporary France.

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