In recent decades the debate among scholars, lawyers, politicians and others about how societies deal with their past has been constant and intensive. Legal Institutions and Collective Memories situates the processes of transitional justice at the intersection between legal procedures and the production of collective and shared meanings of the past. Building upon the work of Maurice Halbwachs, this collection of essays emphasises the extended role and active involvement of contemporary law and legal institutions in public discourse about the past, and explores their impact on the shape that collective memories take in the course of time. The authors uncover a complex pattern of searching for truth, negotiating the past and cultivating the art of forgetting. Their contributions explore the ambiguous and intricate links between the production of justice, truth and memory. The essays cover a broad range of legal institutions, countries and topics. These include transitional trials as monumental spectacles as well as constitutional courts, and the restitution of property rights in Central and Eastern Europe and Australia. The authors explore the biographies of victims and how their voices were repressed, as in the case of Korean Comfort Women. They explore the role of law and legal institutions in linking individual and collective memories in the transitional period through processes of lustration, and they analyse divided memories about the past and their impact on future reconciliation in South Africa. The collection offers a genuinely comparative approach, allied to cutting-edge theory
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This book situates the processes of transitional justice in the broader framework and perspective of law and memories.
Introduction: The Legacy of Maurice Halbwachs SUSANNE KARSTEDT Part I: 'The Truth and Nothing but the Truth': Truth and Justice between the Past and the Present 1. Unspeakable Memories and Commensurable Laws STANLEY COHEN 2. An Emerging 'Right to Truth': Latin-American Contributions JUAN E MENDEZ Part II: Divided Memories, Contested Truths, Silenced Voices 3. Reflections on Law and Memory EMILIOS CHRISTODOULIDIS AND SCOTT VEITCH 4. Divided Memories: How Emerging Democracies Deal with the Crimes of Previous Regimes HERIBERT ADAM 5. Common Past, Divided Truth: The Truth and Reconciliation Commission in South African Public Opinion GUNNAR THEISSEN 6. From Silence to Testimony: The Role of Legal Institutions in the Restoration of the Collective Memories of Korean 'Comfort Women' YOUNG-HEE SHIM Part III: Law, Memory and the Politics of Culture and Identity 7. Negotiating the Past: Culture Industry and the Law HEINZ STEINERT 8. Australia's Sorry Judges: Nationalism and Collective Memory KATHY LASTER 9. Experienced Authenticity of Culture and Legal Liberties ARTHUR L STINCHCOMBE Part IV: Creating and Restituting Rights after Abusive Regimes: Bridges between the Past and the Future 10. Constitutional Interpretation after Regimes of Horror KIM LANE SCHEPPELE 11. Paying for Past Injustices and Creating New Ones: On Property Rights Restitution in Poland as an Element of the Unfinished Transformation GRAZ* YNA SKA?PSKA Part V: The Stores of Memory: Files, Individual Biographies and Collective Memories 12. Biographies, Legal Cases and Political Transitions CAROL A HEIMER AND ARTHUR L STINCHCOMBE 13. Biographies and Resumes as Part of Life under Communist Rule in the Czech Republic JIR' INA SIKLOVA 14. The 'Stasi Records', the Public and Collective Memories: The Inspection of Personal Records ROGER ENGELMANN 15. The Art of Forgetting: The Communist Police State as a Non-reality ANDRZEJ ZYBERTOWICZ Part VI: Failing Memory: The Law and its Past 16. The Loss of Early Women Lawyers from Collective Memory in Germany: A Memoir of Magdalene Schoch KONSTANZE PLETT 17. Putting the Nazi Past Behind: Juvenile Justice and Germany's Changing Political Culture RUTH G HERZ
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These essays focus on the extended role and active involvement of law and legal institutions in public discourse about the past, and their impact on the shape that collective memories take.
Original research and theory on the relations between law, legal institutions and social processes.The volumes in this series are eclectic in their disciplines, methodologies and theoretical perspectives, but they all share a strong comparative emphasis. The volumes originate in workshops hosted by the Onati International Institute for the Sociology of Law.Founding Series Editors: William L F Felstiner Eve Darian-Smith Editorial Board: Carlos Lugo, Hostos Law School, Puerto Rico Jacek Kurczewski, Warsaw University, Poland Marie-Claire Foblets, Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Germany Ulrike Schultz, Fern Universität, Germany
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781841133270
Publisert
2009-08-03
Utgiver
Vendor
Hart Publishing
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Dybde
21 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
428

Redaktør

Om bidragsyterne

Susanne Karstedt is Professor of Criminology at the School of Sociology and Criminology at Keele University.