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Making whole what has been smashed : on reparation politics

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This book explores the spread in recent years of political efforts to rectify injustices handed down from the past.

Although it recognises that campaigns for reparations may lead to an improvement in the well being of victims of mistreatment by states and to reconciliation among former antagonists, it examines the extent to which the concern with the past may represent a departure from the traditionally future-oriented stance of progressive politics.

Viewing the search for 'coming to terms with the past' as a form of politics, it argues that there are major differences between reparations for the living victims of past wrongdoing and reparations for the descendants of such victims.

More fundamentally, it argues that claims for reparations comprise a relatively novel kind of politics that involves a quest for symbolic recognition and material compensation for those seeking them - through the idiom of the past rather than the present.

The prominent role of lawyers in such politics speaks to a larger trend toward the 'juridification of politics' that often has problematic consequences for these campaigns. Concerns to right the wrongs of the past, the book concludes, may distract from the fight to overcome contemporary injustices.

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Product Details
Harvard University Press
0674019431 / 9780674019430
Hardback
340.115
01/01/2006
United States
English
194 p. : ill.
24 cm
postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More