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Georges Pernot

Auguste Alain Georges Pernot (6 November 1879 – 14 September 1962) was a conservative French lawyer and politician. He was a deputy and then a senator before and during World War II (1939–45). He was Minister of Public Works in 1929–30, Minister of Justice in 1934–35, Minister of Blockade in 1939–40 and briefly Minister of the French Family and Public Health in June 1940. After World War II (1939–45) he was again a senator from 1946 to 1959. Throughout his career Pernot was a vocal pronatalist, pushing for government policies that would support the family and encourage higher birth rates to counter the demographic crisis in France. He believed that women should be encouraged to remain at home to raise children.

Auguste Alain Georges Pernot
Pernot in 1930
Minister of Public Works
In office
3 November 1929 – 13 December 1930
Preceded byPierre Forgeot
Succeeded byÉdouard Daladier
Minister of Justice
In office
8 November 1934 – 7 June 1935
Preceded byHenry Lémery
Succeeded byLéon Bérard
Minister of Blockade
In office
13 September 1939 – 21 March 1940
Succeeded byGeorges Monnet
Minister of the French Family and Public Health
In office
6 June 1940 – 16 June 1940
Preceded byMarcel Héraud
Succeeded byJean Ybarnégaray
Personal details
Born(1879-11-06)6 November 1879
Besançon, Doubs, France
Died14 September 1962(1962-09-14) (aged 82)
Besançon, Doubs, France
OccupationLawyer

Early years edit

Auguste Alain Georges Pernot was born on 6 November 1879 in Besançon, Doubs. His father was a barrister at the court of Besançon.[1] He was one of eight children, and would himself have seven children. He inherited conservative Catholic views, but was loyal to the Republic. His early education was at the Frères de Marie in Besançon. In 1904 he submitted a legal thesis on the rights to the salary of the married woman.[2]

Georges Pernot became an advocate at the Besançon court of appeal.[1] In 1905, the year in which the separation of the church and state came into force, he fought for the clerical cause.[2] He enlisted in the territorial army in 1914 at the start of World War I (1914–18). He volunteered for the front, was wounded, received three citations, rose to the rank of captain and was decorated with the Legion of Honor.

Pernot was elected a municipal councilor in Besançon in 1919. Throughout his political career Pernot was interested in family rights.[1] In 1921 he founded the Union of Large Families of Doubs, one of the first branches of the Federation of Associations of Large Families (Fédération des Associations des Familles Nombreuses), created in September 1921.[2]

Deputy edit

Pernot was elected deputy for Doubs in 1924.[1] He led the left wing of the National Catholic Federation (Fédération nationale catholique, FNC).[3] As a Social Catholic he pushed for social reforms.[4] By 1926 there was support for pacification, in which the Catholics would stop trying to capture the state and in exchange would be allowed to teach. In 1927 he criticized the right wing members of the FNC "whose intransigence had harmed them in the past, and who were depriving themselves once again of the influence that they ought to have on the destiny of the country.[3]

Pernot was elected deputy for Pontarlier in 1928. He was also general councilor for Doubs from 1928 for the canton of Morteau. He was vice-president of the chamber of deputies from 1928. He specialized in legal and family issues.[1] In 1930 Pernot became president of the Federation of Large Families.[2] He was Minister of Public Works from 3 November 1929 to 13 December 1930 in the cabinet of André Tardieu. During his term of office the parliament voted to double the national road network to 40,000 kilometres (25,000 mi).[1]

Pernot was reelected deputy for Pontarlier in 1932.[1] After the 1932 election Pernot and left the National Catholic Federation since he was unwilling to join the same parliamentary group as its right-wing members.[5] In 1932 Pernot was the moving force behind the family allocation bill, which forced all employers to provide family benefits.[6] He represented France twice in the League of Nations. He led the negotiations between France and Germany over the status of the Saar.[1]

Pernot was Minister of Justice from 8 November 1934 to 7 June 1935 in the cabinet of Pierre-Étienne Flandin.[1] On 22 February 1935 Henry Dorgères, a Fascist sympathizer and leader of the "Green Shirt" movement, made an inflammatory speech in Rouen. Pernot, who was already concerned about the movement, made sure that Dorgères was prosecuted for the speech with no delay.[7] In the end, Dorgères was given a suspended sentence of six months in prison on 29 August 1935.[8]

Senator edit

Pernot was elected senator for Doubs in November 1935 on the first ballot.[1] He criticized the Matignon accord of June 1936, which settled union grievances after the recent general strike, saying it was "an accord between workers and employers reached under government supervision that dealt with everything except family allowances; they thought of everything except the most important!".[9] On 8 January 1938 Pernot gave a speech in the Senate on the demographic crisis. He rejected defeatism and stop-gap responses. He called for the family vote, tax code reform, better housing, priority for members of large families in employment in the public service and creation of an appropriate moral climate.[10] He wanted to stop the movement of people to the cities and encourage women to return to the home. He noted that eight million women held jobs, and argued that if women were paid to stay at home the family would benefit while unemployment would be reduced.[11] He said, "if the government wishes to undertake this policy with courage, it will have behind it the unanimity of Parliament and the unanimity of the country, for all of us share the deep conviction that we will not achieve the health of the nation except by a return to the old virtues of the family."[12]

In February 1938 Pernot talked of the "moral sickness" of France in a speech in which he cited statistics that showed that France's population was falling behind Italy and Germany.[13] He called for a legal document to organize and strengthen the existing laws and regulations, and an official organization to develop and promote these laws. He said, "We must create a policy that will restore this country's faith, soul, ideal, as well as its trust and confidence in the future."[14] The government of Édouard Daladier established the High Committee on the Population (Haut Comité de la Population, HCP) in February 1939. It included Pernot and the pronatalists Fernand Boverat and Adolphe Landry. Its mandate was to prepare reforms to encourage the growth of the population, particularly in rural areas. This led to the Family Code (Code de la Famille), enacted in July 1939, which introduced family allowances in agriculture and reformed family allowances in commerce and industry. It redistributed benefits from small families to larger ones, and gave birth bonuses for children born in the first two years of marriage.[15]

After the outbreak of World War II (1939–45) Pernot was made Minister of Blockade in the war cabinet of Édouard Daladier from 13 September 1939 to 21 March 1940.[1] The ministry was not staffed until October 1939, and the inter-ministerial Blockade Committee was only formed at the end of October. Pernod chaired the committee, which coordinated preventative purchasing efforts abroad. However, he was handicapped by lack of authority over the departments represented on the committee. The blockade was ineffective.[16] In December 1939 Pernot's optimistic forecasts were rejected by the conservative Paul Bastid.[17] Pernod reported in March 1940 that Germany's shipments from overseas had dropped but imports by land had increased, notably from the Soviet Union, the Balkans and Italy.[16] After being replaced as Blockade Minister, in April 1940 Pernot criticized the failure to stimulate the wartime economy, saying "Reports on top of reports, all stuffed with figures, many of which unfortunately provide little comfort. What an effort remains to increase our number of aircraft, to accelerate the production of munitions."[18]

On 5 June 1940 the second cabinet of Paul Reynaud created the Ministry of the Family, with Pernot as minister. He was also Minister of Health.[19] The new Family Ministry was to help families that had been displaced by the war.[20] Pernot held office only until 16 June 1940. On 10 July 1940, he voted in favour of granting the cabinet presided by Marchal Philippe Pétain authority to draw up a new constitution, thereby effectively ending the French Third Republic and establishing Vichy France.[1] In 1941 Pernot was named a member of the National Council.[21] In June 1941 the High Committee on the Population (HCP) was dissolved and the Consultative Committee on the Family (Comité consultatif de la Famille) was created in its place. Pernot, Alfred Sauvy and Jacques Doublet all continued from the HCP to the new committee.[22] The committee established teams to investigate family-related legislation, housing, food rationing, financial assistance, childhood and moral protection.[23] From 1943 to 1945 Pernot was a member of the departmental council of Doubs. He was dismissed from the Senate in 1945.[21]

Post-war career edit

As soon as France was liberated Pernot began a propaganda drive to address the demographic crisis in France through stronger policies to encourage families. In July 1945 he launched the pronatalist journal Pour la vie (For Life). The first issues of Pour la vie tried to show that pronatalism had arisen in the pre-war period, and that it should be recognized for the Code de la Famille rather than for its collaboration with the Vichy Regime.[24]

Pernot was elected to the Council of the Republic in 1946. At first he was president of the Republican Party of Liberty (Parti républicain de la liberté, PRL). He then joined the Independent Republicans (Républicains indépendants). He remained most active in issues concerning the family and children. He was designated French representative to the committee on social issues of the United Nations Economic Council. He was a member of the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe, and chaired the Committee on Population and Refugees of the Council of Europe.[21]

Pernot voted for the draft law on constitutional reform on 2–3 June 1958 that led to the French Fifth Republic. He did not seek reelection in 1959. In July 1959 he was made a commander of the Legion of Honor. He died on 15 September 1962 in Besançon, Doubs, aged 82.[21]

Publications edit

  • Pernot, Georges (1904). Les Droits de la femme mariée sur les produits de son travail. l'auteur. p. 269.
  • Pernot, Georges (1938). La Situation démographique de la France et la crise de dénatalité... fédération des associations de familles nombreuses de France. p. 27.
  • Manceau, Bernard (1942). Pour la repopulation : Des assurances familiales. Georges Pernot, preface. "L'Argus. p. 60.
  • Bernard Amoudru; Paul Chanson; Georges Pernot; Édouard Rolland (1945). Famille et propriété. Paris: Éditions familiales de France. p. 40.
  • Georges Pernot (1946). "Un vieil ennemi de la famille, les lois depuis 1789". La Société familiale. Paris: Éditions familiales de France. p. 48.
  • Georges Pernot (1971). Journal de guerre 1940-1941. Roger Marlin, preface. Paris: les Belles lettres. p. 236.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Jolly 1960–1977, p. 2649.
  2. ^ a b c d Rosental 2003, p. 23.
  3. ^ a b Passmore 2013, p. 273.
  4. ^ Passmore 2013, p. 278.
  5. ^ Passmore 2013, p. 283.
  6. ^ Nord 2012, p. 64.
  7. ^ Paxton 1997, p. 135.
  8. ^ Paxton 1997, p. 137.
  9. ^ Dutton 2002, p. 148.
  10. ^ Atkin & Tallett 2003, p. 243.
  11. ^ Atkin & Tallett 2003, p. 237.
  12. ^ Atkin & Tallett 2003, p. 237–238.
  13. ^ Robcis 2013, p. 43.
  14. ^ Robcis 2013, p. 44.
  15. ^ Dutton 2002, p. 178.
  16. ^ a b Imlay 2003, p. 59.
  17. ^ Imlay 2003, p. 176.
  18. ^ Imlay 2003, p. 290.
  19. ^ Rosental 2003, p. 55.
  20. ^ Robcis 2013, p. 49.
  21. ^ a b c d La documentation française 2005.
  22. ^ Nord 2012, p. 119.
  23. ^ Robcis 2013, p. 50.
  24. ^ Dutton 2002, p. 212.

Sources edit

  • Atkin, Nicholas; Tallett, Frank (2003-11-08). The Right in France: From Revolution to Le Pen. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 978-1-86064-916-5. Retrieved 2015-10-21.
  • Dutton, Paul V. (2002-05-16). Origins of the French Welfare State: The Struggle for Social Reform in France, 1914–1947. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-43296-2. Retrieved 2015-10-21.
  • Imlay, Talbot C. (2003). Facing the Second World War: Strategy, Politics, and Economics in Britain and France, 1938-1940. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-926122-2. Retrieved 2015-10-21.
  • Jolly, Jean (1960–1977). "Georges Pernot". Dictionnaire des parlementaires français (1889-1940) (in French). Vol. VII. Paris: Presses universitaires de France. ISBN 2-1100-1998-0. Retrieved 2015-10-20.
  • La documentation française (2005). "Auguste Alain Georges Pernot". Dictionnaire des parlementaires français de 1940 à 1958 (in French). Retrieved 2015-10-17.
  • Nord, Philip (2012-08-26). France's New Deal: From the Thirties to the Postwar Era. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-4008-3496-9. Retrieved 2015-10-21.
  • Passmore, Kevin (2013-01-01). The Right in France from the Third Republic to Vichy. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-965820-6. Retrieved 2015-10-21.
  • Paxton, Robert O. (1997-09-26). French Peasant Fascism : Henry Dorgeres' Greenshirts and the Crises of French Agriculture, 1929-1939. Oxford University Press, USA. ISBN 978-0-19-535474-4. Retrieved 2015-10-21.
  • Robcis, Camille (2013-04-19). The Law of Kinship: anthropology, psychoanalysis, and the family in France. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-6839-1. Retrieved 2015-10-21.
  • Rosental, Paul-André (2003-03-27). Intelligence démographique (L') (in French). Odile Jacob. ISBN 978-2-7381-1258-3. Retrieved 2015-10-20.

georges, pernot, auguste, alain, november, 1879, september, 1962, conservative, french, lawyer, politician, deputy, then, senator, before, during, world, 1939, minister, public, works, 1929, minister, justice, 1934, minister, blockade, 1939, briefly, minister,. Auguste Alain Georges Pernot 6 November 1879 14 September 1962 was a conservative French lawyer and politician He was a deputy and then a senator before and during World War II 1939 45 He was Minister of Public Works in 1929 30 Minister of Justice in 1934 35 Minister of Blockade in 1939 40 and briefly Minister of the French Family and Public Health in June 1940 After World War II 1939 45 he was again a senator from 1946 to 1959 Throughout his career Pernot was a vocal pronatalist pushing for government policies that would support the family and encourage higher birth rates to counter the demographic crisis in France He believed that women should be encouraged to remain at home to raise children Auguste Alain Georges PernotPernot in 1930Minister of Public WorksIn office 3 November 1929 13 December 1930Preceded byPierre ForgeotSucceeded byEdouard DaladierMinister of JusticeIn office 8 November 1934 7 June 1935Preceded byHenry LemerySucceeded byLeon BerardMinister of BlockadeIn office 13 September 1939 21 March 1940Succeeded byGeorges MonnetMinister of the French Family and Public HealthIn office 6 June 1940 16 June 1940Preceded byMarcel HeraudSucceeded byJean YbarnegarayPersonal detailsBorn 1879 11 06 6 November 1879Besancon Doubs FranceDied14 September 1962 1962 09 14 aged 82 Besancon Doubs FranceOccupationLawyer Contents 1 Early years 2 Deputy 3 Senator 4 Post war career 5 Publications 6 Notes 7 SourcesEarly years editAuguste Alain Georges Pernot was born on 6 November 1879 in Besancon Doubs His father was a barrister at the court of Besancon 1 He was one of eight children and would himself have seven children He inherited conservative Catholic views but was loyal to the Republic His early education was at the Freres de Marie in Besancon In 1904 he submitted a legal thesis on the rights to the salary of the married woman 2 Georges Pernot became an advocate at the Besancon court of appeal 1 In 1905 the year in which the separation of the church and state came into force he fought for the clerical cause 2 He enlisted in the territorial army in 1914 at the start of World War I 1914 18 He volunteered for the front was wounded received three citations rose to the rank of captain and was decorated with the Legion of Honor Pernot was elected a municipal councilor in Besancon in 1919 Throughout his political career Pernot was interested in family rights 1 In 1921 he founded the Union of Large Families of Doubs one of the first branches of the Federation of Associations of Large Families Federation des Associations des Familles Nombreuses created in September 1921 2 Deputy editPernot was elected deputy for Doubs in 1924 1 He led the left wing of the National Catholic Federation Federation nationale catholique FNC 3 As a Social Catholic he pushed for social reforms 4 By 1926 there was support for pacification in which the Catholics would stop trying to capture the state and in exchange would be allowed to teach In 1927 he criticized the right wing members of the FNC whose intransigence had harmed them in the past and who were depriving themselves once again of the influence that they ought to have on the destiny of the country 3 Pernot was elected deputy for Pontarlier in 1928 He was also general councilor for Doubs from 1928 for the canton of Morteau He was vice president of the chamber of deputies from 1928 He specialized in legal and family issues 1 In 1930 Pernot became president of the Federation of Large Families 2 He was Minister of Public Works from 3 November 1929 to 13 December 1930 in the cabinet of Andre Tardieu During his term of office the parliament voted to double the national road network to 40 000 kilometres 25 000 mi 1 Pernot was reelected deputy for Pontarlier in 1932 1 After the 1932 election Pernot and left the National Catholic Federation since he was unwilling to join the same parliamentary group as its right wing members 5 In 1932 Pernot was the moving force behind the family allocation bill which forced all employers to provide family benefits 6 He represented France twice in the League of Nations He led the negotiations between France and Germany over the status of the Saar 1 Pernot was Minister of Justice from 8 November 1934 to 7 June 1935 in the cabinet of Pierre Etienne Flandin 1 On 22 February 1935 Henry Dorgeres a Fascist sympathizer and leader of the Green Shirt movement made an inflammatory speech in Rouen Pernot who was already concerned about the movement made sure that Dorgeres was prosecuted for the speech with no delay 7 In the end Dorgeres was given a suspended sentence of six months in prison on 29 August 1935 8 Senator editPernot was elected senator for Doubs in November 1935 on the first ballot 1 He criticized the Matignon accord of June 1936 which settled union grievances after the recent general strike saying it was an accord between workers and employers reached under government supervision that dealt with everything except family allowances they thought of everything except the most important 9 On 8 January 1938 Pernot gave a speech in the Senate on the demographic crisis He rejected defeatism and stop gap responses He called for the family vote tax code reform better housing priority for members of large families in employment in the public service and creation of an appropriate moral climate 10 He wanted to stop the movement of people to the cities and encourage women to return to the home He noted that eight million women held jobs and argued that if women were paid to stay at home the family would benefit while unemployment would be reduced 11 He said if the government wishes to undertake this policy with courage it will have behind it the unanimity of Parliament and the unanimity of the country for all of us share the deep conviction that we will not achieve the health of the nation except by a return to the old virtues of the family 12 In February 1938 Pernot talked of the moral sickness of France in a speech in which he cited statistics that showed that France s population was falling behind Italy and Germany 13 He called for a legal document to organize and strengthen the existing laws and regulations and an official organization to develop and promote these laws He said We must create a policy that will restore this country s faith soul ideal as well as its trust and confidence in the future 14 The government of Edouard Daladier established the High Committee on the Population Haut Comite de la Population HCP in February 1939 It included Pernot and the pronatalists Fernand Boverat and Adolphe Landry Its mandate was to prepare reforms to encourage the growth of the population particularly in rural areas This led to the Family Code Code de la Famille enacted in July 1939 which introduced family allowances in agriculture and reformed family allowances in commerce and industry It redistributed benefits from small families to larger ones and gave birth bonuses for children born in the first two years of marriage 15 After the outbreak of World War II 1939 45 Pernot was made Minister of Blockade in the war cabinet of Edouard Daladier from 13 September 1939 to 21 March 1940 1 The ministry was not staffed until October 1939 and the inter ministerial Blockade Committee was only formed at the end of October Pernod chaired the committee which coordinated preventative purchasing efforts abroad However he was handicapped by lack of authority over the departments represented on the committee The blockade was ineffective 16 In December 1939 Pernot s optimistic forecasts were rejected by the conservative Paul Bastid 17 Pernod reported in March 1940 that Germany s shipments from overseas had dropped but imports by land had increased notably from the Soviet Union the Balkans and Italy 16 After being replaced as Blockade Minister in April 1940 Pernot criticized the failure to stimulate the wartime economy saying Reports on top of reports all stuffed with figures many of which unfortunately provide little comfort What an effort remains to increase our number of aircraft to accelerate the production of munitions 18 On 5 June 1940 the second cabinet of Paul Reynaud created the Ministry of the Family with Pernot as minister He was also Minister of Health 19 The new Family Ministry was to help families that had been displaced by the war 20 Pernot held office only until 16 June 1940 On 10 July 1940 he voted in favour of granting the cabinet presided by Marchal Philippe Petain authority to draw up a new constitution thereby effectively ending the French Third Republic and establishing Vichy France 1 In 1941 Pernot was named a member of the National Council 21 In June 1941 the High Committee on the Population HCP was dissolved and the Consultative Committee on the Family Comite consultatif de la Famille was created in its place Pernot Alfred Sauvy and Jacques Doublet all continued from the HCP to the new committee 22 The committee established teams to investigate family related legislation housing food rationing financial assistance childhood and moral protection 23 From 1943 to 1945 Pernot was a member of the departmental council of Doubs He was dismissed from the Senate in 1945 21 Post war career editAs soon as France was liberated Pernot began a propaganda drive to address the demographic crisis in France through stronger policies to encourage families In July 1945 he launched the pronatalist journal Pour la vie For Life The first issues of Pour la vie tried to show that pronatalism had arisen in the pre war period and that it should be recognized for the Code de la Famille rather than for its collaboration with the Vichy Regime 24 Pernot was elected to the Council of the Republic in 1946 At first he was president of the Republican Party of Liberty Parti republicain de la liberte PRL He then joined the Independent Republicans Republicains independants He remained most active in issues concerning the family and children He was designated French representative to the committee on social issues of the United Nations Economic Council He was a member of the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe and chaired the Committee on Population and Refugees of the Council of Europe 21 Pernot voted for the draft law on constitutional reform on 2 3 June 1958 that led to the French Fifth Republic He did not seek reelection in 1959 In July 1959 he was made a commander of the Legion of Honor He died on 15 September 1962 in Besancon Doubs aged 82 21 Publications editPernot Georges 1904 Les Droits de la femme mariee sur les produits de son travail l auteur p 269 Pernot Georges 1938 La Situation demographique de la France et la crise de denatalite federation des associations de familles nombreuses de France p 27 Manceau Bernard 1942 Pour la repopulation Des assurances familiales Georges Pernot preface L Argus p 60 Bernard Amoudru Paul Chanson Georges Pernot Edouard Rolland 1945 Famille et propriete Paris Editions familiales de France p 40 Georges Pernot 1946 Un vieil ennemi de la famille les lois depuis 1789 La Societe familiale Paris Editions familiales de France p 48 Georges Pernot 1971 Journal de guerre 1940 1941 Roger Marlin preface Paris les Belles lettres p 236 Notes edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Jolly 1960 1977 p 2649 a b c d Rosental 2003 p 23 a b Passmore 2013 p 273 Passmore 2013 p 278 Passmore 2013 p 283 Nord 2012 p 64 Paxton 1997 p 135 Paxton 1997 p 137 Dutton 2002 p 148 Atkin amp Tallett 2003 p 243 Atkin amp Tallett 2003 p 237 Atkin amp Tallett 2003 p 237 238 Robcis 2013 p 43 Robcis 2013 p 44 Dutton 2002 p 178 a b Imlay 2003 p 59 Imlay 2003 p 176 Imlay 2003 p 290 Rosental 2003 p 55 Robcis 2013 p 49 a b c d La documentation francaise 2005 Nord 2012 p 119 Robcis 2013 p 50 Dutton 2002 p 212 Sources editAtkin Nicholas Tallett Frank 2003 11 08 The Right in France From Revolution to Le Pen I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 86064 916 5 Retrieved 2015 10 21 Dutton Paul V 2002 05 16 Origins of the French Welfare State The Struggle for Social Reform in France 1914 1947 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 43296 2 Retrieved 2015 10 21 Imlay Talbot C 2003 Facing the Second World War Strategy Politics and Economics in Britain and France 1938 1940 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 926122 2 Retrieved 2015 10 21 Jolly Jean 1960 1977 Georges Pernot Dictionnaire des parlementaires francais 1889 1940 in French Vol VII Paris Presses universitaires de France ISBN 2 1100 1998 0 Retrieved 2015 10 20 La documentation francaise 2005 Auguste Alain Georges Pernot Dictionnaire des parlementaires francais de 1940 a 1958 in French Retrieved 2015 10 17 Nord Philip 2012 08 26 France s New Deal From the Thirties to the Postwar Era Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 3496 9 Retrieved 2015 10 21 Passmore Kevin 2013 01 01 The Right in France from the Third Republic to Vichy OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 965820 6 Retrieved 2015 10 21 Paxton Robert O 1997 09 26 French Peasant Fascism Henry Dorgeres Greenshirts and the Crises of French Agriculture 1929 1939 Oxford University Press USA ISBN 978 0 19 535474 4 Retrieved 2015 10 21 Robcis Camille 2013 04 19 The Law of Kinship anthropology psychoanalysis and the family in France Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 6839 1 Retrieved 2015 10 21 Rosental Paul Andre 2003 03 27 Intelligence demographique L in French Odile Jacob ISBN 978 2 7381 1258 3 Retrieved 2015 10 20 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Georges Pernot amp oldid 1177650634, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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