Details

Latin America between Conflict and Reconciliation


Latin America between Conflict and Reconciliation


Research in Peace and Reconciliation, Band 1 1. Aufl.

von: Martin Leiner, Susan Fläming, David Tombs, Susan Flämig, Matthieu de Nanteuil, Mariana Chacón, Elizabeth Lira, Brian Loveman, Katharina Freudenberg, Kanan Kitani, Christo Thesnaar, Andreas Hasenclever, Jan Sändig, Witold Mucha, Hugo Rojas, Francois Dermange, Dennis Doyle, Matthias Gockel, Makoto Mizutani, Arie Nadler, Bertram Schmitz, Benoît Bourgine

130,00 €

Verlag: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 18.07.2012
ISBN/EAN: 9783647560113
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 272

Dieses eBook erhalten Sie ohne Kopierschutz.

Beschreibungen

In the last decades, many countries in Latin America underwent a transition from dictatorship to democracy. Truth commissions were an essential instrument of uncovering politically motivated crimes and serious human rights violations. However, in many cases truth came without justice, perpetrators were not held accountable, and the reparations policy was rather restrictive. The authors of this volume address the issue from a transdisciplinary perspective. On the one hand, they focus on a past that is shaped by fierce conflicts but also by attempts of fostering reconciliation in the middle of conflict. On the other hand, they address a reconciliation that still lies in the future and has to do with justice.Their first part offers a collection of case studies that approach the topics of reconciliation and conflict resolution during and in the aftermath of dictatorship and civil war from different perspectives and academic disciplines. Their second part is dedicated to experiences with reconciliation, conflict resolution and migration from a global and comparative perspective.Several contributors reflect the Hölderlin perspective of "reconciliation in the middle of dispute". Other contributions aim to deepen our theoretical understanding of reconciliation by exploring the diversity of interpretations of the concept itself and elaborating the specific benefit of reconciliatory approaches for a sustainable peace. Two authors offer an in-depth analysis of particular conflicts, and one article deals with the influence of religion and culture on the social role of Brazilian migrants in Japan.
Martin Leiner ist Professor für Systematische Theologie mit Schwerpunkt Ethik an der Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena.

Diese Produkte könnten Sie auch interessieren:

What Is a Church?
What Is a Church?
von: Matthew Emadi
EPUB ebook
4,65 €
What Does Depression Mean for My Faith?
What Does Depression Mean for My Faith?
von: Kathryn Butler
EPUB ebook
7,44 €
How Can I Grow in Hospitality?
How Can I Grow in Hospitality?
von: Keri Folmar
EPUB ebook
4,65 €