The Theory of Collective Reconciliation The Theory of Collective Reconciliation
Routledge Approaches to History

The Theory of Collective Reconciliation

A Trinity of Recognition, Responsibility and Reparation

    • USD 54.99
    • USD 54.99

Publisher Description

What does reconciliation mean and entail? Is collective reconciliation for entire societies or nations possible? This book aims to present it as a highly achievable albeit difficult and complex goal requiring political and collective commitment, resources, and – most importantly – the will to change.

Reconciliation is the synthesis and an overarching process consisting of a trinity of recognition, responsibility, and reparation. Through comparative case studies where these different aspects have been implemented in a variety of degrees and combinations, the book illustrates how these constituent parts relate to each other and how they can enhance and complement one another. It also investigates whether there are scenarios where the omission of a certain part can in fact have a positive impact on the reconciliatory process in the short and long terms, the extent to which the order in which different measures are implemented matters, and how national cases differ from international ones.

This volume is aimed at postgraduates, researchers, and academics of peace and conflict studies, as well as history, social sciences, political sciences, and legal studies.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2024
9 September
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
296
Pages
PUBLISHER
Taylor & Francis
SELLER
Taylor & Francis Group
SIZE
1.7
MB
Plurihistoricity Plurihistoricity
2025
Towards a Critique of Methodological Presentism in Migration Research Towards a Critique of Methodological Presentism in Migration Research
2025
The Lost Human and the Real End of History The Lost Human and the Real End of History
2025
Reframing Indigenous Biography Reframing Indigenous Biography
2024
Key Metaphors for History Key Metaphors for History
2024
Ideas and Methodologies in Historical Research Ideas and Methodologies in Historical Research
2022