Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Public Forgiveness in Post-Conflict Contexts

View through CrossRef
There seems to be a pervasive trend towards public apologies, forms of national introspection and appeals to grant forgiveness. Archbishop Tutu’s motto that 'there is no future without forgiveness' is well known. The South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission has become an important model and source of inspiration for many other countries that want to deal with their past grievances and internal conflicts. This book discusses the role of forgiveness within processes of peace building and transitional justice. Does ‘forgiveness’ enable a public or political use of the term? Is it possible to forgive on behalf of others, and if so, under what conditions? These conceptual questions are related to reflections on the cultural and religious contexts of expressing forgiveness. Do forgiving words promote a willingness to look ahead and prevent a relapse into conflicting views on the poisonous past? Or do they bring along aversion? Maybe the ‘push’ towards forgiveness is experienced as highly unfair.
Intersentia
Title: Public Forgiveness in Post-Conflict Contexts
Description:
There seems to be a pervasive trend towards public apologies, forms of national introspection and appeals to grant forgiveness.
Archbishop Tutu’s motto that 'there is no future without forgiveness' is well known.
The South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission has become an important model and source of inspiration for many other countries that want to deal with their past grievances and internal conflicts.
This book discusses the role of forgiveness within processes of peace building and transitional justice.
Does ‘forgiveness’ enable a public or political use of the term? Is it possible to forgive on behalf of others, and if so, under what conditions? These conceptual questions are related to reflections on the cultural and religious contexts of expressing forgiveness.
Do forgiving words promote a willingness to look ahead and prevent a relapse into conflicting views on the poisonous past? Or do they bring along aversion? Maybe the ‘push’ towards forgiveness is experienced as highly unfair.

Related Results

Forgiveness
Forgiveness
This chapter argues that there is a crucial difference in the ways Jesus and the Apostle Paul defined the practice of interpersonal forgiveness, which theologians have largely igno...
Conflict Resolution in Asia
Conflict Resolution in Asia
Conflict Resolution in Asia: Mediation and Other Cultural Models is an exploration of human interaction, conflict, and conflict resolution in the incredibly diverse region that con...
The Forgiveness of Others
The Forgiveness of Others
Abstract The Forgiveness of Others explores how we can understand “change” in the practice of forgiveness. To forgive is to change from feeling resentment to feeling...
Pastoralist-Farmer Conflicts in Nigeria
Pastoralist-Farmer Conflicts in Nigeria
This book provides an in-depth analysis of one of the most persistent and perennial types of conflict in Africa– pastoralist-farmer conflicts – and the linkages with conflict manag...
Conflict in Congress
Conflict in Congress
The book introduces Legislative Conflict Theory. The theory suggests that conflict in legislatures is two-dimensional and that a moderate level of conflict will be most productive....
Rohingya Crisis
Rohingya Crisis
Myanmar’s security forces have conducted clearance operations in the Rakhine State since August 2017, driving a mass exodus of ethnic Rohingyas to neighboring Bangladesh. In The Ro...
Gracious Forgiveness
Gracious Forgiveness
Abstract Divine forgiveness is expressed in biblical and liturgical contexts through a variety of metaphors—canceling debts, covering stains, forgoing or stopping li...
Impossibility
Impossibility
This chapter argues that the very prospect of witnessing in late modern public culture is defined by countervailing imperatives: the publicly lauded ideal that bearing witness to t...

Back to Top