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Building peace together : A qualitative study of faith-based NGOs on intergroup reconciliation in Bosnia and HerzegovinaEcker, Merle Daliah January 2022 (has links)
Intergroup reconciliation involves a holistic change in attitudes and interactions between groups. However, sustainable reconciliation has often times been overlooked from previous research. This paper aims to contribute to the research gap by applying the well-tested contact hypothesis in the context of NGO structure. The positive results in change of reconciliation attitudes suggests thereby that NGOs should not only be evaluated by its external effects but also by its internal effects on its own members. No negative consequences could be found. Combining intergroup contact with youth, providing informal education and combining it with inter-faith projects within a faith-based institution have yielded the best results.
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Reconciliation Through Truth? - A Comparison of the Judicial Approach of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and the Amnesty Principle of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South AfricaMosler, David January 2011 (has links)
Throughout the past three decades the world has witnessed an increased transition of states from autocratic systems to liberal democracies. During such transitions the reconciliation of societies fractured by previous human atrocities is an integral part for success. This article explores the impacts of principles of truth and justice on reconciliation of fractured societies during the process of transitional justice. Throughout the process it will provide an insight on different aspects and levels of the terminology of reconciliation. To illustrate the difference between a judicial approach and the process of amnesty giving, it will contrast the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa. Furthermore, it will provide an analytical account on the impact of internal actors versus external actors on reconciliation of fractured societies. This analysis will provide an understanding of the factors at work during reconciliation as a process and an outcome.
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Education about Religion, Beliefs and Worldviews: Exploring the Viewpoints of Educators and Parents in CanadaCusack, Christine L. 23 September 2022 (has links)
Public apprehension about religious diversity has pervaded Canadian headlines at an increasing pace, particularly during the past fifteen years. Urban centres and suburban and rural communities alike have seen clashes over the manifestation of diverse belief systems in daily life. From immigrant ‘codes of conduct,’ a ‘charter of values,’ controversy over the wearing of the Sikh kirpan in school, to bans on religious vestments and symbols worn by public servants including teachers, conflict and socially divisive misunderstandings are often the unfortunate fruits of ignorance about the ‘other.’ Many religious actors at the center of these stories have seen their cases ultimately adjudicated in Canada’s highest court, reinforcing the perception that religious difference is a source of conflict and division in Canadian society. In this era of global conversations about how liberal democracies approach diversity, this dissertation expands the conversation on education about religion, beliefs and worldviews in Canadian classrooms. With public education situated as a primary site for constructing democratic citizenship, the question of how this evolving dynamic of diversity is taught in schools is symbolically and practically linked to broader debates about government and societal responses to pluralism. This thesis makes an original contribution to knowledge by interweaving thinking from the literature on pluralism, xenosophia and deep equality as a conceptual framework, with empirical work investigating what parents and educators thought Canadian public-school (primary and secondary) students should learn in order to best prepare them for living and thriving in a diverse society. Triangulated data gathered from semi-structured interviews with parents and educators (n=22), responses from a national online survey (n=190), and a textual analysis of secondary student manuals from Quebec’s Ethics and Religious Culture Program (n=5), provided a holistic vantage point from which to consider the central research questions. Analysis and interpretation of findings revealed that learning about diversity and difference were of central importance, however, there were fundamental concerns regarding indoctrination, rejection of majority religious privilege and even-handedness in the presentation of religious and nonreligious belief systems. Existing discourse on religious and worldview literacy education in Canada tends to focus on teaching and learning in the context of a discrete curriculum such as the Ethics and Religious Culture program. However, findings from this research suggest that increased public awareness about the religious entanglements of colonization, combined with the significant rise in the number of Canadians who hold non-religious worldviews, contribute to a rethinking of how such literacy endeavours may be better integrated into other subject areas such as civics, citizenship, history or social studies.
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A pastoral response to some of the challenges of reconciliation in South Africa following on from the Truth and Reconciliation CommissionHess, Shena Bridgid 30 November 2006 (has links)
This work is concerned with healing practices that are created within a participatory framework in pastoral theology. It works in post-colonial and postapartheid
times in South Africa following on from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. The thesis looks to forms of participation with both victims and perpetrators of
apartheid. It seeks to challenge singular identities of victims and perpetrators, whites and blacks, which are bound up in juridical practices that are embedded
within binary forms of identity. It exposes some of the problems associated with the splitting of a subject from an object of enquiry.
The research concerns a journey with a group of Mothers who lost their sons and husbands to the violence of the apartheid state. It is also a journey with some of
the perpetrators who were responsible for the elimination of these men. It seeks to deconstruct identity in order to find alternate descriptions of people, both the victims and perpetrators that are not constructed within a binary oppositional form. This is worked with ideas from the social construction movement particularly ideas relating to relational responsibility. The research attempts to create a safe enough context for accountability, vulnerability and healing to take
place within a participatory frame of pastoral care. It works with post-modern theology and some of the philosophy of Derrida, Foucault and Levinas. / Practical Theology / D.Th.(Practical Theology with specialisation in Pastoral Therapy)
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White skin under an African Sun : (white) women and (white) guilt in J.M. Coetzee's Disgrace, Barbara Kingsolver's The Poisonwood Bible and Doris Lessing's The Grass is SingingHorrell, Georgina Ann 06 1900 (has links)
In the aftermath of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in South Africa
J.M.Coetzee writes of the "system" of guilt and shame, debt and retribution which
operates throughout society. He and writers like Doris Lessing and Barbara
Kingsolver tell stories which traverse and explore the paths tracked by society's quest
for healing and restitution. (White) women too, Coetzee's protagonist (in Disgrace)
muses, must have a place, a "niche" in this system. What is this "niche" and what role
do the women in these texts play in the reparation of colonial wrong? How is their
position dictated by discourses which acknowledge the agency of the (female) body in
epistemologies of guilt and power?
This mini-dissertation attempts to trace the figure of the white woman in three late
201h-/early 21 51-century postcolonial literary texts, in order to read the phrases of
meaning that have been inscribed on her body. The novels read are J.M.Coetzee's
Disgrace, Barbara Kingsolver's The Poisonwood Bible and Doris Lessing's The
Grass is Singing. / English Studies / M. Eng. (Gender, Identity and Embodiment)
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Away from the precipice: the mission of the churches in Kenya in the wake of the 2007/8 post-election violenceWarui, Stephen Kariuki Apollo January 2014 (has links)
The phenomenon of the 2007/8 post-election violence in Kenya is complex and has numerous facets. This is because of the historical and socio-political dimensions connected with it, some of which the present study has attempted to discuss. The main objective of this research is to develop a missiological model of reconciliation by understanding and addressing the underlying causes of the 2007/8 post-election violence through an interpretive and missiological reading of the 2008 report of the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights. The concepts of politics, ethnicity, human rights and violence are chosen as analytical units for this study and through an integrated approach to their interconnectedness, a more adequate framework to identify and analyze the causes of violence is created. The churches in Kenya have played ambiguous roles in the social-political arena and this study surveys these roles and suggests different missional approaches through which the churches in Kenya can participate in the mission of reconciliation. / New Testament
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Dealing lightly with the wounds of my people : a theological ethical critique of the South African Truth and Reconciliation CommissionLephakga, Tshepo 05 1900 (has links)
This study is an attempt to critique the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission from a theological ethical perspective. The central critique and argument of this study will be that, it is impossible to reconcile the dispossessor and the dispossessed or the oppressor and oppressed in the way the South African TRC did. As such, it will be befitting to start off this study which explores some of the noticeable lessons and challenges emerging from the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission (hereafter, the TRC) by elucidating that this study is an attempt to contribute to the on-going discussions on reconciliation. It is also vital to mention up front that this study attempts to contribute to the discussion on reconciliation which seeks to remove injustice at the root. It contributes to a discussion of the weeds of alienation and fragmentation, and it stands in contrast to the frequent use of reconciliation merely to reach some political accommodation and not to address the critical questions of justice, equality and dignity (Boesak
& DeYoung 2012). It is also befitting to point out that two central themes – political pietism and Christian quietism – form the backdrop to this study (Boesak & DeYoung 2012). The study contends that reconciliation in South Africa was used merely to reach some political accommodation and did not address the three critical questions of justice, equality and dignity. These arrangements perpetually favour the rich and powerful but deprive the powerless of justice and dignity. Hitherto, this reconciliation is presented as if it does respond to the need for genuine reconciliation and employs a language that sounds like the truth, but it is in fact deceitful – and this we call political pietism. It is also vital to mention that “reconciliation” is a Christian concept, and as such, Christians’ measure matters of reconciliation with the yardstick of the gospel and therefore should know better. However, as it will be shown in this study, when
Christians in South Africa discovered that the TRC was not really promoting reconciliation, they became complicit in a deceitful reconciliation. This may have been for reasons of self-protection, fear or a desire for acceptance by the powers that govern the world. Whichever way one looks at it, they tried to seek to accommodate the situation, to justify it and to refuse to run the risk of challenge and prophetic truth telling. As a result, they denied the demands of the gospel and refused solidarity with the powerless and oppressed. This is called Christian quietism (Boesak & DeYoung 2012:1).
This study in its attempt to critique the South Africa TRC from a theological ethical perspective will point out that, the TRC which was obviously the product of the negotiated settlement needs to be understood against the background of the global struggle of particularly Third-World countries which were resisting authoritarian regimes put in place by the West for the benefit of the West. As such, this study will point out how the West, in their attempt to keep a grip on the Third-World countries – particularly on their resources – had to recommend and promote their notion of democracy. Democracy became the only option for Third-World countries as a result of the fall of the Soviet Union. It must, however, be mentioned that the problem is not democracy but the manifestation thereof under capitalism. This is because the notion of democracy was recommended to Third-World countries when capitalism was becoming global. As such, this presented some contradictions because democracy emphasizes joint interests, equality and common loyalties whilst capitalism is based on self-seeking inequality and conflicting individual and group interest (Terriblanche 2002). This means that a transition to democracy (especially constitutional democracy) means that the former oppressor or dispossessor will hold on to economic power. As such, the sudden interest of both the NP and the corporate sector in South Africa to a transition to democracy needs to be understood against this background. This study will argue and demonstrate how the ANC was outsmarted during the negotiations in that, at the formal negotiations, the ANC won political power whilst the NP/corporate sector in South Africa won economic power. This is mentioned to here to point out that both the elite compromise reached at the formal and informal negotiations and the influence of the Latin-American truth commissions led to the inability or unwillingness of the TRC to uncover the truth about systemic exploitation. As such, this study will argue and demonstrate that, on the one hand, reconciliation was not added to the truth commission for the purpose of confronting the country with the demands of the gospel and, on the other hand, the TRC was set up (from its inception) for failure. / Philosophy, Practical and Systematic Theology / D.Th. (Theological Ethics)
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Fourteen years on : the legacy of giving testimony to the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission for survivors of human rights violationsFaku-Juqula, Nthabiseng Anna January 2014 (has links)
Objectives : This study focused, unusually, on the experience of people who gave testimony in person to the TRC many years previously. The study’s objectives were firstly to explore the personal, social and political events that participants recounted as motivating them to testify to the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), and secondly to analyse the meanings that participants gave retrospectively, about fourteen years later, to testifying before the TRC. METHOD: 30 participants were recruited, from poor socioeconomic backgrounds, in Gauteng and Western Cape provinces, South Africa. Semi-structured interviews were conducted in participants’ preferred SA languages. Data were analysed using principles of modified grounded theory. Findings: Participants from the two provinces testified through shared hopes for change but differed in the specific political and violent events that they wished to make public. Looking back, many participants expressed disillusionment with the TRC’s effectiveness. Participants were concerned by unfulfilled promises, inadequate reparations and lack of socioeconomic improvement. Memories of horrific abuses were still vivid, and most doubted that the TRC process could result in forgiveness, amnesty, reconciliation and healing. Participants felt unacknowledged, invalidated and inadequately recompensed, symbolically and monetarily. Nonetheless, participants expressed suspended hope, if not for themselves but for the future generations. ‘Misrecognition’ emerged as the overarching theme, an experience of feeling ignored and dismissed, finding promises for material recompense broken, and their contribution to the seemingly successful TRC processes not recognised. Conclusion: The TRC process neglected the abuse of the apartheid period, which has left a legacy. This study has shown that many participants continue to struggle with the legacy of a very unequal society, and further follow-up research is vital to review participants’ long-term needs. Lack of improvement in social and economic conditions has led some people in South Africa to question the effectiveness of the TRC.
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The role of worship and ethics on the road towards reconciliationMuller, B.A. 09 1900 (has links)
The original publication is available at http://www.ve.org.za / Reconciliation in a divided society, like the South African one, is in dire need of a new moral discourse and praxis. This article argues that this moral discourse must also be conducted on an often forgotten level, namely in the worshipping praxis of the Church. The article describes the renewed interest of ethicists and liturgists in the relationship between liturgy and ethics and especially the role of rituals. The article then focuses on the renewal of basic Christian rituals like preaching and sacraments, prayer and praise to serve this much needed moral discourse. / Publishers' Version
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Peacekeeping or peace enforcement? : a proposed model for intervention in Sub-Saharan AfricaLinks, Stalin Bernard 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPA)--Stellenbosch University, 2000. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The principles and characteristics of peacekeeping, as the United Nations (UN)
in its search towards global peace and stability originally intended, are not
adhered to in Sub-Saharan African countries. In this context, peacekeeping
operations are perceived to be synonymous with biased armed intervention and
the enforcement of peace through the application of force, often without the
consent of the parties involved in conflict.
As the political situation in many Sub-Saharan African states deteriorates, a
greater need for peacekeeping and even peace enforcement operations has
arisen. Mounting pressure on South Africa from regional forces, as well South
Africa's own national interest to become involved in peacekeeping, calls for an
evaluation of 'Sub-Saharan African peacekeeping' per se. This situation creates
a dilemma as regards both the responses by regional organs and the reaction of
states to the endemic and escalating conflicts in collapsing states. Can what is
currently happening in Sub-Saharan African still be referred to as
peacekeeping? Do we need a fresh approach to conflict resolution in Sub-
Saharan Africa? Are the UN principles, set in a post-World War " global
context, still applicable in a deteriorating intra-state context?
In an attempt to find answers to these questions, this research focuses on the
nature of peacekeeping operations from an analytical, comparative perspective
with the aim of identifying commonalities and differences in the approaches and
practices of countries that have participated in peacekeeping operations. Could
it be that 'classical' UN peacekeeping has simply become historically outdated
and that modern peacekeeping operations are dictated by the socio-political
environment and thus requires a new approach? It would appear that the
concept of peacekeeping needs to be re-defined from an African perspective in
order to equip regional organs with a firm theoretical foundation for possible
future involvement in Sub-Saharan African peacekeeping and peace
enforcement endeavours. The UN's peacekeeping performance on the African continent over the past
decade has raised serious doubts as to whether the UN has the capacity or will
to deal effectively with inter-state and more specifically, intra-state conflict.
Consequently, Sub-Saharan African peacekeeping is currently standing at a
crossroad. It is also evident that a transition needs to be made from 'classical'
UN peacekeeping principles to a 'modern' African approach in touch with
Africa's prevailing circumstances and demands.
From the research findings and case studies, a conclusion is drawn concerning
how 'modern' peacekeeping practices compare to 'classical' peacekeeping, as
envisaged in Chapter VI of the UN Charter. In addition, a model is proposed for
dealing with the unique challenges of Sub-Saharan African intra-state conflict. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die beginsels en kenmerke van vredebewaring, soos die Verenigde Nasies (VN)
in sy soeke na wêreldvrede en stabiliteit oorspronklik beoog het, word nie in
Afrika suid van die Sahara eerbiedig nie. In die konteks, word vredebewaringsoperasies
geag as sinoniem te wees met partydige gewapende inmenging en
die afdwing van vrede deur die aanwending van mag, dikwels sonder die
toestemming van diegene wat in die konflik betrokke is.
Die verslegtende politieke situasie in vele lande in Afrika suid van die Sahara
bring mee dat 'n groter behoefte bestaan vir vredebewaring en selfs operasies
om vrede af te dwing. Toenemende druk op Suid-Afrika deur streeksmagte
sowel as Suid-Afrika se eie nasionale belang om by vredebewaring in Afrika
betrokke te raak, noodsaak juis 'n evaluasie van vredebewaring in Afrika suid
van die Sahara. Hierdie situasie veroorsaak 'n dilemma in sover dit die reaksie
betref van streeksorganisasies sowel as dié van mislukkende state wat
toenemend by inheemse konflik betrokke raak. Kan dit wat tans in Afrika suid
van die Sahara aan die gebeur is steeds beskou word as vredebewaring? Word
'n nuwe benadering tot die beslegting van inheemse konflik in Afrika suid van
die Sahara vereis? Is die VN beginsels soos gestel binne 'n globale na-tweedewêreld-
oorlogse konteks steeds van toepassing op 'n verslegtende intra-staat
konflik konteks?
In 'n poging om antwoorde te vind op dié vrae, fokus die navorsing op die aard
van vredebewaringsoperasies vanuit 'n analitiese, vergelykende perspektief.
Hierdie fokus het ten doel om ooreenkomste en verskille in die benaderings tot
en toepassings van vrede in lande wat aan vredebewaringsoperasies
deelgeneem het, te identifiseer. Is dit dalk moontlik dat 'klassieke'
vredebewaring histories verouderd is en dat 'moderne'
vredebewaringsoperasies deur die sosio-politiese omgewing dikteer word en as
sulks, 'n nuwe benadering vereis? Dit wil voorkom asof die konsep van
vredebewaring vanuit 'n Afrika perspektief her-definieer behoort te word sodat
streeksorganisasies toegerus kan word met stewige teoretiese grondbeginsels
waarop toekomstige vredebewaringsoperasies in Afrika suid van die Sahara
gebaseer kan word.
Die VN se vertoning in die bewaring van vrede en meer spesifiek, dié se
vertoning die afgelope dekade, laat ernstige twyfel ontstaan oor dié organisasie
se vermoë of wil om effektief met konflik binne en tussen state te handel. As
gevolg hiervan, bevind Afrika suid van die Sahara haar by 'n kruispad wat die
bewaring van vrede aanbetref. Dit is ook duidelik dat daar 'n verskuiwing
behoort plaas te vind vanaf 'klassieke' vredebewaringsbeginsels na 'n meer
'moderne' Afrika benadering wat in pas is met Afrika se eiesoortige
omstandighede en eise.
Vanuit die navorsingsbevindinge en gevallestudies word daar in die
gevolgtrekkings gekyk in hoe 'n mate 'moderne' vredebewaring in die praktyk
met 'klassieke' vredebewaring, soos beoog in Hoofstuk VI van die VN Handves,
vergelyk. Aansluitend hierby, word 'n model voorgestel vir die hantering van die
intra-staat vraagstukke wat voortspruit uit konflik binne state in Afrika suid van
die Sahara.
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