Jonnart Law

The Jonnart Law was the culmination of Governor General Charles Jonnart's reform program for French Algeria, passed on 4 February 1919. Although it increased the Algerian electorate to approximately 425,000, it was greatly watered down from the original proposals of 1917. Proposals such as the creation of a joint European and Muslim council in Paris were abandoned entirely. The law was controversial, with colons believing that too much had been given to the Algerians and the Algerians largely believing it to be insufficient recognition from a country for which they had fought and died during the First World War.[1]

References

  1. J. Ruedy, Modern Algeria: The Origins and Development of a Nation, (Bloomington, 2005), pp. 112-3.
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