
Contents
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Merits and implications of the discourse theoretical perspective Merits and implications of the discourse theoretical perspective
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Alternatives to reconciliation Alternatives to reconciliation
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Reconciliation and post-conflict peacebuilding Reconciliation and post-conflict peacebuilding
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Cite
Extract
In the literature on transitional justice and peacebuilding, post-conflict populations are often considered as deeply divided and traumatised societies which are in need of reconciliation (Daly and Sarkin, 2007; Lederach, 1997). Reconciliation, in turn, is commonly understood as a specific and promising tool which, in the shape of a TRC, can be applied to transitional or post-conflict situations in order to foster social peace and harmony (Little, 1999; Philpott, 2006b; Rotberg and Thompson, 2000).
This book suggested a radically different understanding of reconciliation. Adopting a critical perspective on the global quest for reconciliation, it argued that reconciliation should be seen not as a given and valid reality, but as a contingent yet powerful global discourse which is now accepted as a valid knowledge in global politics. Rather than being brought to a society that is already in need of reconciliation after conflict or repression, it argued that it is the reconciliation discourse itself that creates the conditions of its own necessity by producing a particular reconciliation reality in the societies to which it is deployed.
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