توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب :
دشمنان سابق چگونه پس از جنگ های داخلی آشتی می کنند؟ آیا آنها واقعاً هرگز به معنای کامل آشتی می کنند؟ اتحاد مجدد سیاسی چگونه با ادغام مجدد فرهنگی درازمدت مرتبط است؟ این جلد با گرد هم آوردن کارشناسان جنگهای داخلی در سراسر جهان مدرن - ایالات متحده، اسپانیا، رواندا، کلمبیا، روسیه و موارد دیگر - تحلیل مقایسهای و فراملی چالشهایی را ارائه میکند که پس از جنگ داخلی به وجود میآیند.
فهرست مطالب :
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
Preface
List of contributors
1. Introduction: Reconciliation: Civil war by other means
Notes
Bibliography
PART I: Post-civil war reconciliation in our time
2. Reconciliation challenges in post-genocide Rwanda
Introduction
The brutality of the genocide and other serious crimes
One-sided transitional justice
The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR)
Rwanda’s ordinary courts
Gacaca courts
Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC)
Monopoly of power by one ethnic group
Consensus democracy
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
3. War and peace in Colombia: The impact of the peace accords on local communities
The origins of the war with the FARC
Armed conflict beyond the Cold War
The 2012–2016 peace process with the FARC
The human toll of armed conflict
Community-based approaches to peace and reconciliation
ARDECAN
FUSFI
Agroarte
Three examples of peace from below
Concluding remarks
NOTES
Bibliography
4. Political violence, civil war and the paths of national reconciliation in Côte d’Ivoire
Transitional justice and reconciliation in the literature
Côte d’Ivoire, from prosperity to poverty and political divisions: the pathways to civil war
Transitional justice in Côte d’Ivoire: coping with international norms under the gaze of the former colonial power
A tradition of instrumental approaches that leads to divisions: experiences from the Reconciliation Forum (2001) and the Commission of Truth, Dialogue and Reconciliation (2011–2015)
The forum of reconciliation, the “Estates-General of the Republic” or “general amnesty”?
A socioemotional learning falling apart, or, when each camp fixates upon certain symbolic representations of the conflict
A distributive learning impeded by political exclusion
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
PART II: Problems of reconciliation in twentieth-century Europe
5. The Russian Civil War: Is national reconciliation possible?
Notes
Bibliography
6. Franco’s peace: Fighting the Spanish Civil War, 1939–1975
NOTES
Bibliography
7. The Italian Social Republic, the Second World War and the memory of the “vanquished”
“Exiles in the homeland”
July 25, September 8, 1943 and civil war
The Fascist choice
A world that ends
“Us” and “them”: the end of the war, post-insurrectional violence and concentration camps
The memories of the “vanquished”: private memory
The memory of the “vanquished”: public memory
Conclusions
Notes
Bibliography
PART III: Memory and reconciliation after the US Civil War
8. Lee returns to the Capitol: A case study in reconciliation and its limits
Notes
Bibliography
9. The persistence of memory: African Americans and transitional justice efforts in Franklin County, Pennsylvania
The Gettysburg campaign, civilian trauma and origins of memory
Reparations: the gendered politics of reunification
Race, truth, and the path toward reconciliation
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
10. No more shall the winding rivers be red: The role of regionalism in sectional reconciliation
Notes
Bibliography
11. Beyond memory: The U.S. South and the emotional politics of reconciliation
NOTES
Bibliography
PART IV: The US Civil War in transnational perspective
12. To “heal the wounded spirit”: Former Confederates’ international perspective on Reconstruction and reconciliation
Notes
Bibliography
13. “Save our heritage”: Contested reconciliation of mid-nineteenth-century separatist movements
Notes
Bibliography
14. Reconciliation as a political strategy: The United States after its Civil War
Notes
Bibliography
PART V: Processes of reconciliation
15. Fostering peace after civil war: When should civil society participate?
Civil society and resolving civil wars: the case of UNSCR1325
Hindering the cause of peace? Civil society at the bargaining table
Delays to the peace process
Unjustified assumption of unified interests
Disappointed expectations
Is it all in the Timing? Civil society and the implementation of peace agreements
Conclusions
Notes
Bibliography
16. United we heal, divided we reconcile: Group solidarity and the problem of status after civil conflicts
On conflict, trauma, and reconciliation
Civil conflicts and victimization
On status
Healing, reconciliation and the problem of status
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب به زبان اصلی :
How do former enemies reconcile after civil wars? Do they ever really reconcile in any complete sense? How is political reunification related to longer-term cultural reintegration? Bringing together experts on civil wars around the modern world – the United States, Spain, Rwanda, Colombia, Russia, and more - this volume provides comparative and transnational analysis of the challenges that arise in the aftermath of civil war.