
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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Hierarchies of ‘Good’ and ‘Bad’ Victims Hierarchies of ‘Good’ and ‘Bad’ Victims
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Hierarchies and Heroes for the Cause Hierarchies and Heroes for the Cause
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Hierarchies and ‘the Silence of Social Opprobrium’ Hierarchies and ‘the Silence of Social Opprobrium’
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Conclusion Conclusion
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3 Victimhood and Heroes and Hierarchies
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Published:November 2024
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Abstract
Hierarchies of victimhood are often predicated on distinctions between what Madlingozi (2007) has termed ‘good’ victims and ‘bad’ victims and the question of who can or should be considered a ‘victim’. Chapter 3 argues that the creation of hierarchies of victimhood frequently runs deeper than the demarcation of ‘good’ and ‘bad’ victims. Drawing on the themes of celebration and censure, this chapter offers a new lens through which to understand the construction of hierarchies of victimhood in transitional justice. Structured by three overlapping themes—hierarchies of ‘good’ and ‘bad’ victims; hierarchies and heroes for the cause; and hierarchies and ‘the silence of social opprobrium’—this chapter argues that in the transitional politics of praise and denunciation, the ‘net’ of social control is often tightly calibrated to highlight and celebrate the actions of those victims considered ‘heroes’ within each community and simultaneously exclude—or censure—less comfortable variants of victimhood (Cohen 1985).
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