12 research outputs found
Speak out on poverty: Hearing, inaudibility, and citizenship in post-apartheid South Africa
In 1998, Speak Out on Poverty held hearings across South Africa shortly after the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) completed eighteen months of highly publicized, nationwide hearings at which victims testified. Speak Out challenged the TRC’s focus on overt political violations, seen to occlude forms of structural violence central to apartheid's policy and practice, as well as longer legacies of colonialism. Reading Speak Out alongside the TRC puts pressure on supposed differences between official truth commissions or tribunals and those run by civil society. Discussing Speak Out in relation to the TRC signaled more than a set of comparisons. In a time of transition, Speak Out spoke from within and against the noise of the TRC. It aimed to make poverty and inequality the nation's priority rather than reconciliation, or at least to challenge notions of reconciliation that did not have inequity and poverty at its center
Dealing with the Past: Memory and European Integration
Memory has become an object of dispute in the EU. Different groups and states do not have a
full convergence of views and this raises the question as to whether the EU should or should not
be involved. A pluralist conception of justice would argue that the recognition of memory is not
excluded as a form of justice. Adopting this view, this paper argues that the recognition of
memory can be addressed at the EU level if the different components of justice are allocated to
the proper spheres (recognition, retribution and recognition) and levels (national and European).This paper was written thanks to a grant from the Spanish
Ministry of Education (Grant PR2010-0077) under the Programm for stances of senior professors and researchers
in foreign research institutions.Peer reviewe