• Users Online: 209
  • Print this page
  • Email this page
Export selected to
Endnote
Reference Manager
Procite
Medlars Format
RefWorks Format
BibTex Format
  Access statistics : Table of Contents
   2005| September-December  | Volume 3 | Issue 3  
    Online since December 23, 2022

 
 
  Archives   Previous Issue   Next Issue   Most popular articles   Most cited articles
 
Hide all abstracts  Show selected abstracts  Export selected to
  Viewed PDF Cited
ARTICLE
Introduction
van der Veer Guus
September-December 2005, 3(3):0-0
[ABSTRACT]   Full text not available  [PDF]
  134 17 -
ARTICLES
Twelve Creative Ways to Foster Reconciliation after violence
Johan Galtung
September-December 2005, 3(3):222-234
Based on his experience as a mediator in many conflict areas, the author discusses twelve approaches to rconciliation. He concludes that no single approach is capable of handling the complexity of the situation after violent events, thus combining approaches makes more sense. The parties involved in the conflict should be invited to discuss these approaches and therefore be able to arrive at the best combination for their own situation.
[ABSTRACT]   Full text not available  [PDF]
  82 13 -
Reconciliation - The Wrong Track to Peace?
David Becker
September-December 2005, 3(3):167-179
The article discusses the shortcomings of the current theory and practice of reconciliation and explores the possibilities of addressing the complex social and psychological processes involved in dealing with the past.
[ABSTRACT]   Full text not available  [PDF]
  76 8 -
Reconciliation in the Aftermath of Violent Conflict in Rwanda
Annemiek Richters, Cora Dekker, Klaas de Jonge
September-December 2005, 3(3):203-221
Reconciliation in the aftermath of the history of violent conflict in Rwanda is approached as part of a set of deeply interrelated issues, such as individual and social suffering, justice, remembering and forgetting, truth-telling, accountability, forgiveness, trauma therapy, socio-therapy, human rights, and development. The article is based on literature study, conversations with people of all walks of life in Rwanda, and six years of research experience in this country of one of the authors. A major challenge addressed is if, and to what extent, internationally oriented concepts and programs and cultural specific approaches in the field of reconciliation are in conflict with each other or whether they have the potential to reinforce each other.
[ABSTRACT]   Full text not available  [PDF]
  72 9 -
Empirical criteria for reconciliation in practice
Dan Bar-On
September-December 2005, 3(3):180-191
This article illustrates the opinion that a bottom-up reconciliation requires, in addition to a top-down legal and political agreement between the parties, a complementary educational and social-psychological process. After an intractable conflict such a process will help the people involved to work through and let go of hatred, the desire for revenge, the mistrust, and the pain that were imprinted as a result of the conflict. A successful synchronisation of these two processes could diminish the danger of a renewed outburst of violence. The article discusses experience with the TRT (To Reflect and Trust) group, which has brought together Jewish descendants of Holocaust survivors and German descendants of Nazi perpetrators over the past thirteen years. Lessons learned from these experiences are applied to the current Israeli-Palestinian conflict. In the course of this discussion, the concept of reconciliation is critically examined. Several empirical criteria are suggested to study reconciliation in practice.
[ABSTRACT]   Full text not available  [PDF]
  70 8 -
Can There Be Healing Without Justice? Lessons from the Commission for Reception, Truth and Reconciliation in East Timor
Dominique Le Touze, Derrick Silove, Anthony Zwi
September-December 2005, 3(3):192-202
Truth and reconciliation processes initiated in post-conflict countries have several interrelated objectives with the two key aims being to confront past injustices and to heal the suffering caused by such abuses. Structural constraints, however, often limit the extent to which justice can be achieved for all victims and their families. The present report is based on a review of the Commission for Reception, Truth and Reconciliation (known by its Portuguese acronym CAVR), a national initiative that was concluded in 2005. The review was based on interviews with key staff associated with the Commission. Although the key CAVR personnel and support agencies interviewed believed that the process was beneficial, they also noted that a minority of participants continued to suffer from a range of traumatic mental health problems that required special psychological attention. Pervasive anger was evident amongst survivors, particularly in response to the impunity enjoyed by the leading perpetrators of past atrocities, lost of whom had sought refuge in Indonesia. Lessons from East Timor and elsewhere suggest the importance of anticipating the inevitable feelings of anger and frustration arising from the limitations of TRC processes in achieving justice for all victims.
[ABSTRACT]   Full text not available  [PDF]
  68 9 -
REVIEWS
Book review
Berenice Meintjes
September-December 2005, 3(3):235-236
[ABSTRACT]   Full text not available  [PDF]
  64 9 -
SUMMARIES
Apologize, translated summaries not available

September-December 2005, 3(3):0-0
[ABSTRACT]   Full text not available  [PDF]
  0 0 -
Support