Localising Memory in Transitional Justice

Localising Memory in Transitional Justice portes grátis

Localising Memory in Transitional Justice

The Dynamics and Informal Practices of Memorialisation after Mass Violence and Dictatorship

Viebach, Julia; Rauschenbach, Mina; Parmentier, Stephan

Taylor & Francis Ltd

01/2024

280

Mole

Inglês

9781032254074

15 a 20 dias

Descrição não disponível.
General introduction

Mina Rauschenbach, Julia Viebach and Stephan Parmentier

PART I Memory and transitional justice

International memory entrepreneurs' prescriptions for the remembrance of the Srebrenica genocide: What implications for local understandings of collective victimhood?

Mina Rauschenbach

Transitional justice principles versus survivors' experience: Conflicting interpretations in Kosovo case study involving missing persons and their memorialisation

Melanie Klinkner and Stephanie Schwandner-Sievers

PART II Memory dynamics in transitional justice

The micro-politics of remembering "the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi" in Rwanda: On the anonymous dead in Karongi district, western Rwanda

Erin Jessee

Bottom-up and thought-provoking sites of memory

Anita Ferrara

Informal commemoration in post-war Burundi: Exploring the usefulness and the limits of the concept

Andrea Purdekova

The struggle to remember: Rhodes Must Fall in South Africa

Ingrid Samset

PART III Localised memory in transitional justice

Place-bound proximity at Rwanda's genocide memorials: On coming home to the dead and the affective force of their remains

Julia Viebach

Missing people and missing stories in the aftermath of genocide: Reclaiming local memories at the places of suffering

Hariz Halilovich

Music, testimony, and emotional engagement in alternative memorial ceremonies in Palestine-Israel

Luisa Gandolfo

Epilogue: Localising memory and reinventing the present

Brandon Hamber
collective memory studies;post-conflict commemoration;survivor narratives;informal justice practices;genocide remembrance;peacebuilding anthropology;community-driven memorialisation research