Table of Contents for
Dilemmas of Reconciliation: Cases and Concepts, edited by Carol A.L. Prager and Trudy Govier
Introduction |
Overview |
Perspectives and Approaches
1. Reckoning with Past Wrongs: A Normative Framework |
2. What Is Acknowledgement and Why Is It Important? |
3. Reconciliation for Realists |
4. Crime as Interpersonal Conflict: Reconciliation between Victim and Offender |
5. Mass Rape and the Concept of International Crime |
6. What Can Others Do? Foreign Governments and the Politics of Peacebuilding |
7. Aspects of Understanding and Judging Mass Human Rights Abuses |
Case Studies
8. We Are All Treaty People: History, Reconciliation, and the “Settler Problem” |
9. Toward a Response to Criticisms of the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission |
10. Reimagining Guatemala: Reconciliation and the Indigenous Accords |
11. Coming to Terms with the Terror and History of Pol Pot’s Cambodia (1975–79) |
12. National Reconciliation in Russia? |
Conclusion
13. What We Have Learned |
Index


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