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Truth and Reconciliation Commissions

Truth and Reconciliation Commissions. Collective Emotional Healing. History . 1989 - 116 ongoing Intra-State conflicts in 78 different countries The end of the cold war started many revolutions, and insurgencies Decades of repression and years of war left deep emotional and physical scars

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Truth and Reconciliation Commissions

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  1. Truth and Reconciliation Commissions Collective Emotional Healing

  2. History • 1989 - 116 ongoing Intra-State conflicts in 78 different countries • The end of the cold war started many revolutions, and insurgencies • Decades of repression and years of war left deep emotional and physical scars • The competing groups must reconcile themselves with the past, as well as the future

  3. Anatomy of a Conflict: A Framework for Analysis

  4. Grief Guilt Anger Indignation Confusion Emotions • Fear • Loss • Pain • Hate • Shame • Pity • Violation • Victimization • Insecurity • Humiliation

  5. Post Conflict Options • Amnesia • Trials and Justice • Lustration • Negotiated Restitution and Compensation • Political re-education • Truth Commissions

  6. Theory • Johan Galtung: Positive Peace • “Positive peace is more than the absence of violence; it is the presence of social justice through equal opportunity, a fair distribution of power and resources, equal protection and impartial enforcement of law."

  7. Michel Foucault: Discourse as Power • “Interpretation of reality is an assertion of power” • Ron Kraybill: Emotion • “Reconciliation as an interpersonal or intergroup encounter is a difficult and delicate process that is not simply a matter of the head, but more so of the heart.”

  8. Truth Commissions • Developed over the past 30 years • 30 or so TRC’s, USIP website for list • There have been TRC’s on 4 continents • Definitions vary

  9. Defined time limit of operation Created at a point of transition Officially sanctioned Non-Judicial bodies Authority for unusual access to investigate sensitive issues Focus on the past Investigate Patterns of abuse over time Focus on human rights violations Conclude with a report Common Characteristics

  10. Record the past Identify perpetrators Overcome denial Restore dignity Promote healing Educate about the past Prevent future violence Form basis for Democratic order Promote reconciliation Legitimate and stabilize new regime Create a collective memory Goals

  11. A Model in Transition • TRC model is inherently malleable • Mandate • Local Political Situation • Local Reconciliation Methods • Local Religion • Funding • Infrastructure • Length of time to investigate • This is its greatest strength

  12. State of the Model Now • South Africa’s TRC has become the model • It was provided massive attention • Media • Academic • Political • The hearings were the main focus of attention

  13. Hearings • Preceded by Statement Takers • Small percentage chosen • Usually recorded • Usually translated • Usually very ritualistic • Not a primary source of date, more for collective healing purposes

  14. Role of Hearings • TRC goals are national, not only individual • Media plays a huge role • Ritual plays a huge role • Goal is to reconcile groups (identity groups) • Individual healing is used as a catalyst • Show victims = de-legitimize denial

  15. Strengths • Broad investigative power • Inclusive character • De-legitimizes denial of violent past • Provides dignity to victims • Provides recognition of past crimes • Defeats Impunity • Humanizes the ‘Other’ • Provides security

  16. Weaknesses • ‘Truth’ is not always an indigenous form of reconciliation and psychological healing • TRC model may be viewed as illegitimate • Lack of minority/privileged participation • Suitability only to certain situations • Hard to represent all views • Too open to the charge of purposeful manipulation of victim’s ‘truths’

  17. Conclusion • One among many options • Model in transition – Malleability • Acknowledges and addresses emotion and suffering • Individual to Communal impact • Legitimizes new order by refuting the old

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