Conflict Transformation and Reconciliation

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A01=Sarah Maddison
agonistic democracy
ANC Policy
Australian Reconciliation Process
Author_Sarah Maddison
Category=GTU
Category=JPW
Category=NHTQ
Civil Society
civil society engagement
conceptual
Conflict
Conflict Transformation
Conflict Transformation Efforts
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
equity and redistribution
Hugo Van Der Merwe
institutional reform
Intercultural Bilingual Education
Johannesburg Stock Exchange
King William III
Liberal Peace Agenda
Memoria Del Silencio
Mont Fleur
Montt Trial
multi-level peacebuilding strategies
Peace III
Peace Museums
Peace Walls
peacebuilding
postcolonial
postcolonial societies
postconflict
Race Hate Capital
Reconciliation
Reconciliation Efforts
SACC
South African Civil Society
South African Reconciliation Barometer
South African TRC
Torres Strait Islander People
transitional justice
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415711593
  • Weight: 589g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Jun 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book examines approaches to reconciliation and peacebuilding in settler colonial, post-conflict, and divided societies.

In contrast to current literature, this book provides a broader assessment of reconciliation and conflict transformation by applying a distinctive ‘multi-level’ approach. The analysis provides a unique intervention in the field, one that significantly complicates received notions of reconciliation and transitional justice, and considers conflict transformation across the constitutional, institutional, and relational levels of society. Drawing on extensive fieldwork in South Africa, Northern Ireland, Australia, and Guatemala, the work presents an interdisciplinary study of the complex political challenges facing societies attempting to transition either from violence and authoritarianism to peace and democracy, or from colonialism to post-colonialism. Informed by theories of agonistic democracy, the book conceives of reconciliation as a process that is deeply political, and that prioritises the capacity to retain and develop democratic political contest in societies that have, in other ways, been able to resolve their conflicts. The cases considered suggest that reconciliation is most likely an open-ended process rather than a goal — a process that requires divided societies to pay ongoing attention to reconciliatory efforts at all levels, long after the eyes of the world have moved on from countries where the work of reconciliation is thought to be finished.

This book will be of great interest to students of reconciliation, conflict transformation, peacebuilding, transitional justice and IR in general.

Sarah Maddison is Associate Professor in the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Melbourne. Recent publications include Beyond White Guilt (2011) and Unsettling the Settler State (with Morgan Brigg, 2011).

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