Reconciling Indonesia

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Ambon Town
Balinese Identity
batu
Batu Merah
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Central Lombok
Civil Society
civil society engagement
commission
conflict resolution
Cosmic Balance
cultural reconciliation
East Timor
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grassroots
grassroots peacebuilding in Indonesia
Grassroots Reconciliation
Ham
Helsinki MoU
human
Human Rights
ICG
IDP Camp
justice
Komnas Ham
MUI
post-conflict studies
process
reconciliation
Reconciliation Processes
Repatriation Ceremony
restorative practices
rights
Sasak
September 30th Movement
Suharto Period
Traditional Justice Mechanisms
transitional
transitional justice
truth
Truth Commissions
UN
Women Political Prisoners
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415487047
  • Weight: 660g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Aug 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Indonesia has been torn by massive internal conflicts over the last decade. The absence of functioning national tools of reconciliation and the often limited success of an internationally established ‘reconciliation toolkit’ of truth commissions and law enforcement, justice and human rights, forgiveness and amnesty, requires us to interrogate commonly held notions of reconciliation and transitional justice. Reconciling Indonesia fills two major gaps in the literature on Indonesia and peace and conflict studies more generally: the neglect of grassroots agency for peace and the often overlooked collective and cultural dimension of reconciliation.

Bringing together scholars from all over the world, this volume draws upon multi-disciplinary theoretical perspectives, extensive fieldwork and activists' experience, and explores the ways in which reconciliation connects with issues like civil society, gender, religion, tradition, culture, education, history, displacement and performance. It covers different areas of Indonesia, from Aceh in the West to the Moluccas in the East, and deals with a broad variety of conflicts and violence, such as communal violence, terrorist attacks, secessionist conflicts, localized small-scale conflicts, and the mass violence of 1965-66. Reconciling Indonesia offers new understandings of grassroots or bottom-up reconciliation approaches and thus goes beyond prevalent political and legal approaches to reconciliation.

Reconciling Indonesia is important reading for scholars, activists and anyone interested in current developments in Indonesia and the broader region and in new approaches to peace and conflict research.

Birgit Bräuchler is assistant professor of social and cultural anthropology at the University of Frankfurt.