Theorizing Post-Conflict Reconciliation

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Aboriginal Embassy
account
Aesthetic Subjects
agonistic
agonistic approaches to reconciliation
Agonistic Critique
Agonistic Democrats
bonnie
Bosnian Croats
Bosnian Serbs
Category=JPA
Category=JPS
Civil Society
collective memory studies
commission
Conflict Transformation Process
Divine Violence
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Erik Doxtader
Formal Reconciliation Process
Good Life
honig
justice
Medieval Iceland
Nadim Rouhana
non-Aboriginal People
nonAboriginal People
political pluralism
post-conflict ethics
process
Reconciliatory Processes
restorative justice critique
Rudd's Apology
Rudd’s Apology
Sophie's Choice
Sophie’s Choice
Stolen Generations
Tent Embassy
Thomas Brudholm
transformation
transitional
Transitional Justice
Transitional Justice Policy
transitional justice theory
truth
Victim Recognition
victim testimony analysis

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415781732
  • Weight: 600g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Dec 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The founding of truth commissions, legal tribunals, and public confessionals in places like South Africa, Australia, Yugoslavia, and Chile have attempted to heal wounds and bring about reconciliation in societies divided by a history of violence and conflict.

This volume asks how many of the popular conclusions reached by transitional justice studies fall short, or worse, unwittingly perpetuate the very injustices they aim to suture. Though often well intentioned, these approaches generally resolve in an injunction to "move on," as it were; to leave the painful past behind in the name of a conciliatory future. Through collective acts of apology and forgiveness, so the argument goes, reparation and restoration are imparted, and the writhing conflict of the past is substituted for by the overlapping consensus of community. And yet all too often, the authors of this study maintain, the work done in assuaging past discord serves to further debase and politically neutralize especially the victims of abuse in need of reconciliation and repair in the first place.

Drawing on a wide range of case studies, from South Africa to Northern Ireland, Bosnia, Rwanda and Australia, the authors argue for an alternative approach to post-conflict thought. In so doing, they find inspiration in the vision of politics rendered by new pluralist, new realist, and especially agonistic political theory.

Featuring contributions from both up and coming and well-established scholars this work is essential reading for all those with an interest in restorative justice, conflict resolution and peace studies.

Alexander Keller Hirsch is Lecturer in the Political Science Department at Northeastern University, and Research Fellow at the University of California Humanities Research Institute, USA.