Long road home : building reconciliation and trust in post-war Sierra Leone / Laura Stovel.
2010
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Author
Title
Long road home : building reconciliation and trust in post-war Sierra Leone / Laura Stovel.
Imprint
Cambridge : Intersentia, 2010.
Description
1 online resource (xx, 281 pages) : digital, PDF file(s).
Series
Series on transitional justice ; v.2.
Formatted Contents Note
Introduction : the research journey
The geography of reconciliation
Reconciliation or resignation : power, justice and political reconciliation
A restorative approach to reconciliation
Diamonds, greed and 'San-san boys'
The 'rebel' war
Who are you for? women, children and hierarchies of power
Institutions of reintegration
The Sierra Leone TRC : a snapshot
"We watch them" : building trust in the absence of openness
Beyond the impasse.
The geography of reconciliation
Reconciliation or resignation : power, justice and political reconciliation
A restorative approach to reconciliation
Diamonds, greed and 'San-san boys'
The 'rebel' war
Who are you for? women, children and hierarchies of power
Institutions of reintegration
The Sierra Leone TRC : a snapshot
"We watch them" : building trust in the absence of openness
Beyond the impasse.
Summary
The 1991-2002 war in Sierra Leone was infamous for mass amputations, widespread sexual violence, and forced recruitment of children into rebel forces. It was not an ethnic war, but one that tore families and communities apart in ways that could not be sustained in peacetime. After the war, the Sierra Leone government and civil society organizations encouraged combatants to return home and communities to accept them, even when the combatants, or forces they were associated with, had committed horrendous crimes in those very villages. This book describes how excombatants and civilian survivors in Sierra Leone struggled to reconcile and build trust in their communities a year after the war ended. It explores the contribution of the Sierra Leone Truth and Reconciliation Commission to reconciliation and justice, and questions whether reconciliation is always a good thing. And it examines how the seemingly nebulous concept of reconciliation can be understood so that the term is useful for peacebuilding and consistent with justice. Finally the author argues that Sierra Leone has much to teach peacebuilders in societies emerging from intra-communal violence and much to contribute to comparative analyses of post-conflict transitions.
Note
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 18 Dec 2020).
Location
www
Available in Other Form
Print version:
Linked Resources
Alternate Title
Cambridge Books Online.
Language
English
ISBN
9781839700781 (ebook)
9789400000285 (hardback)
9789400000285 (hardback)
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