Linked bibliography for the SEP article "Reconciliation" by Linda Radzik and Colleen Murphy
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If everything goes well, this page should display the bibliography of the aforementioned article as it appears in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, but with links added to PhilPapers records and Google Scholar for your convenience. Some bibliographies are not going to be represented correctly or fully up to date. In general, bibliographies of recent works are going to be much better linked than bibliographies of primary literature and older works. Entries with PhilPapers records have links on their titles. A green link indicates that the item is available online at least partially.
This experiment has been authorized by the editors of the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. The original article and bibliography can be found here.
- Allais, Lucy, 2012, “Restorative Justice, Retributive Justice, and the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission,” Philosophy and Public Affairs, 39(4): 331–363. (Scholar)
- Alfred, Gerald Taiaiake, 2009, “Restitution is the Real Pathway to Justice for Indigenous Peoples,” in Response, Responsibility and Renewal: Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Journey, Gregory Younging, Jonathan Dewar and Mike DeGagné (eds.), Ottawa: Aboriginal Healing Foundation, pp. 179–87. (Scholar)
- Allen, Jonathan, 1999, “Balancing Justice and Social Unity: Political Theory and the Idea of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission,” The University of Toronto Law Journal, 49(3): 315–353. (Scholar)
- Anker, Kirsten, 2016, “Reconciliation in Translation: Indigenous Legal Traditions and Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission,” Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice, 33(2): 15–44. (Scholar)
- Arbour, Louise, 2007, “Economic and Social Justice for Societies in Transition,” International Law and Politics, 40(1): 1–27. (Scholar)
- Arendt, Hannah, 1977, Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil, New York and London: Penguin. (Scholar)
- Barkan, Elazar, 2000, Guilt of Nations: Restitution and Negotiating Historical Injustices, New York: W. W. Norton & Co. (Scholar)
- Barkan, Elazar, and Alexander Karn (eds.), 2006, Taking Wrongs Seriously: Apologies and Reconciliation, Stanford: Stanford University Press. (Scholar)
- Barry, Robert, 1980, “Just War Theory And The Logic Of Reconciliation,” New Scholasticism, 54: 129–152. (Scholar)
- Barsalou, Judy, and Victoria Baxter, 2007, “The Urge to Remember: The Role of Memorials in Social Reconstruction and Transitional Justice,” Stabilization and Reconstruction, Series No. 5, Washington, D.C.: United States Institute of Peace. (Scholar)
- Bates, Genevieve, Ipek Cinar, and Monika Nalepa, 2019, “Accountability by Numbers: A New Global Transitional Justice Dataset (1946–2016),” Perspectives on Politics, available online. (Scholar)
- Bennett, Christopher, 2008, The Apology Ritual: A Philosophical Theory of Punishment, New York: Cambridge University Press. (Scholar)
- Bhargava, Rajeev, 2012, “The Difficulty of Reconciliation,” Philosophy and Social Criticism, 38(4–5): 369–377. (Scholar)
- Blustein, Jeffrey M., 2014, Forgiveness and Remembrance: Remembering Wrongdoing in Personal and Public Life, New York: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Bohle, Darren, 2017, “The Public Space of Agonistic Reconciliation: Witnessing and Prefacing in the TRC of Canada,” Constellations: An International Journal of Critical and Democratic Theory, 24(2): 257–266. (Scholar)
- Boxill, Bernard, 2003, “A Lockean Argument for Black Reparations,” The Journal of Ethics, 7(1): 63–91. (Scholar)
- Braithwaite, John, 2000, “Repentance Rituals and Restorative Justice,” Journal of Political Philosophy, 8(1): 115–131. (Scholar)
- Brooks, Roy L., (ed.), 1999, When Sorry Isn’t Enough: The Controversy over Apologies and Reparations for Human Injustice, New York: New York University Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 2004, Atonement and Forgiveness: A New Model for Black Reparations, Berkeley: University of California. (Scholar)
- Chandler, David, 2003, “Coming to Terms with the Terror and History of Pol Pot’s Cambodia (1975–79),” in Dilemmas of Reconciliation: Cases and Concepts, C. A. L. Prager and T. Govier (eds.), Waterloo, Ontario: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, pp. 307–26. (Scholar)
- Chiu, Yvonne, 2011, “Liberal Lustration,” The Journal of Political Philosophy, 19(4): 440–464. (Scholar)
- Cohen, Stanley, 1995, “State Crimes of Previous Regimes: Knowledge, Accountability, and the Policing of the Past,” Law & Social Inquiry, 20(1): 7–50. (Scholar)
- Corntassel, Jeff, and Cindy Holder, 2008, “Who’s Sorry Now? Government Apologies, Truth Commissions, and Indigenous Self-Determination in Australia, Canada, Guatemala, and Peru,” Human Rights Review, 9(4): 465–489. (Scholar)
- Coulthard, Glen Sean, 2014, Red Skin, White Masks: Rejecting the Colonial Politics of Recognition, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. (Scholar)
- Crocker, David A., 1999, “Reckoning with Past Wrongs: A Normative Framework,” Ethics and International Affairs, 13 (1): 43–64. (Scholar)
- –––, 2008, Ethics of Global Development: Agency, Capability and Deliberative Democracy, New York: Cambridge University Press. (Scholar)
- David, Roman, 2011, Lustration and Transitional Justice: Personnel Systems in the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. (Scholar)
- de Greiff, Pablo, (ed.), 2006, The Handbook on Reparations, New York: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 2008, “The Role of Apologies in National Reconciliation Processes: On Making Trustworthy Institutions Trusted,” in The Age of Apology: Facing Up to the Past, M. Gibney, R. E. Howard-Hassmann, J.-M. Coicaud and N. Steiner (eds.), Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, pp. 120–36. (Scholar)
- Digeser, P. E. 2001, Political Forgiveness, Ithaca: Cornell University Press. (Scholar)
- du Toit, Andre, 2000, “The Moral Foundations of the South African TRC: Truth as Acknowledgement and Justice as Recognition,” Truth v, Justice: The Morality of Truth Commissions, Robert I. Rotberg and Dennis Thompson (eds.), Princeton: Princeton University Press, pp. 122–140. (Scholar)
- Dwyer, Susan, 1999, “Reconciliation for Realists,” Ethics and International Affairs, 13: 81–98. (Scholar)
- Dyzenhaus, David, 2000, “Justifying the Truth and Reconciliation Commission,” Journal of Political Philosophy, 8(4): 470–496. (Scholar)
- Eisikovits, Nir, 2009, Sympathizing with the Enemy: Reconciliation, Transitional Justice, Negotiation, Dordrecht: Republic of Letters. (Scholar)
- Fabre, Cécile, 2016, Cosmopolitan Peace, New York: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Freeman, Mark, 2011, Necessary Evils: Amnesties and the Search for Justice, New York: Cambridge University Press. (Scholar)
- Garrard, Eve, and David McNaughton, 2011, “Conditional Unconditional Forgiveness,” in The Ethics of Forgiveness: A Collection of Essays, Christel Fricke (ed.), New York: Routledge, pp. 97–106. (Scholar)
- Gibney, Mark, Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, Jean-Marc Coicaud, and Niklaus Steiner, (eds.), 2008, The Age of Apology: Facing Up to the Past, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. (Scholar)
- Gibson, James L., 2004, Overcoming Apartheid: Can Truth Reconcile a Divided Nation?, New York: Russell Sage. (Scholar)
- Govier, Trudy, 2002, Forgiveness and Revenge, New York: Routledge. (Scholar)
- –––, 2006, Taking Wrongs Seriously: Acknowledgment, Reconciliation and the Politics of Sustainable Peace, Amherst, NY: Humanity Books. (Scholar)
- Govier, Trudy, and Wilhelm Verwoerd, 2002a, “Trust and the Problem of National Reconciliation,” Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 32(2): 178–205. (Scholar)
- –––, 2002b, “Forgiveness: The Victim’s Prerogative,” South African Journal of Philosophy, 21(2): 97–111. (Scholar)
- Gray, David C, 2010, “Extraordinary Justice,” Alabama Law Review, 62(1): 55–109. (Scholar)
- Greenawalt, Kent, 2000, “Amnesty’s Justice,” in Truth v, Justice: The Morality of Truth Commissions, Robert I. Rotberg and Dennis Thompson (eds.), Princeton: Princeton University Press, pp. 189–210. (Scholar)
- Grey, Sam and Alison James, 2016, “Truth, Reconciliation, and ‘Double Settler Denial’: Gendering the Canada-South Africa Analogy,” Human Rights Review, 17(3): 303–328. (Scholar)
- Griswold, Charles L., 2007, Forgiveness: A Philosophical Exploration, New York: Cambridge University Press. (Scholar)
- Gutmann, Amy, and Dennis Thompson, 2000, “The Moral Foundations of Truth Commissions,” in Truth v, Justice: The Morality of Truth Commissions, Robert I. Rotberg and Dennis Thompson (eds.), Princeton: Princeton University Press, pp. 22–44. (Scholar)
- Hamber, Brandon, 2009, Transforming Societies after Political Violence, Truth, Reconciliation, and Mental Health, Dordrecht: Springer. (Scholar)
- Hampton, Jean, 1992, “Correcting Harms versus Righting Wrongs: The Goal of Retribution,” UCLA Law Review, 39: 1659–1702. (Scholar)
- Harjes, Kirsten, 2005, “Stumbling Stones: Holocaust Memorials, National Identity, and Democratic Inclusion in Berlin,” German Politics & Society, 23(1): 138–151. (Scholar)
- Harvey, Jean, 1995, “The Emerging Practice of Institutional Apologies,” International Journal of Applied Philosophy, 9(2): 57–65. (Scholar)
- Hayner, Priscilla, 2010, Unspeakable Truths: Transitional Justice and the Challenge of Truth Commissions, 2nd edition, New York: Routledge. (Scholar)
- Hershenov, David B., 1999, “Restitution and Revenge,” Journal of Philosophy, 96(2): 79–94. (Scholar)
- Hirsch, Alexander Keller, (ed.), 2011a, Theorizing Post-Conflict Reconciliation: Agonism, Restitution and Repair, New York: Routledge. (Scholar)
- –––, 2011b, “Fugitive Reconciliation: The Agonistics of Respect, Resentment, and Responsibility in Post-Conflict Society,” Contemporary Political Theory, 10(2): 166–189. (Scholar)
- Hollywood, Dana Michael, 2007, “The Search for Post-Conflict Justice in Iraq: A Comparative Study of Transitional Justice Mechanisms and their Applicability to Post-Saddam Iraq,” Brooklyn Journal of International Law, 33(1): 59–124. (Scholar)
- Hughes, Paul M., 2001, “Moral Atrocity and Political Reconciliation: A Preliminary Analysis,” International Journal of Applied Philosophy, 15(1): 123–133. (Scholar)
- Isaacs, Tracy, 2016, “International Criminal Courts and Political Reconciliation,” Criminal Law and Philosophy, 10(1): 133–142. (Scholar)
- Jankélévitch, Vladimir, 2005, Forgiveness, trans, Andrew Kelley, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. (Scholar)
- Johnstone, Gerry, 2002, Restorative Justice: Ideas, Values, Debates, Cullompton, UK: Willan Publishing. (Scholar)
- Jung, Courtney, 2018, “Reconciliation: Six Reasons to Worry,” Journal of Global Ethics, 14(2): 252–265. (Scholar)
- Kiss, Elizabeth, 2000, “Moral Ambition Within and Beyond Political Constraints: Reflections on Restorative Justice,” in Truth v, Justice: The Morality of Truth Commissions, Robert I. Rotberg and Dennis Thompson (eds.), Princeton: Princeton University Press, pp. 68–98. (Scholar)
- Kofi Annan Foundation, 2018, “Challenging the Conventional: Making Post-Violence Reconciliation Succeed,” available online. (Scholar)
- Krog, Antjie, 2008, “‘This Thing Called Reconciliation’, Forgiveness As Part of an Interconnectedness-Towards-Wholeness,” South African Journal of Philosophy, 27(4): 353–366. (Scholar)
- Kymlicka, Will, and Bashir Bashir, (eds.), 2010, The Politics of Reconciliation in Multicultural Societies, New York: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Llewellyn, Jennifer, and Robert Howse, 1999, “Institutions for Restorative Justice: The South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission,” The University of Toronto Law Journal, 49(3): 355–388. (Scholar)
- Lu, Catherine, 2017, Justice and Reconciliation in World Politics, New York: Cambridge University Press. (Scholar)
- MacLachlan, Alice, 2013, “Gender and Public Apology,” Transitional Justice Review, 1(2): 126–147. (Scholar)
- Malamud-Goti, Jaime, 1990, “Transitional Governments in the Breach: Why Punish State Criminals?” Human Rights Quarterly, 12(1): 1–16. (Scholar)
- Mallinder, Louise, 2008, Amnesty, Human Rights and Political Transitions: Bridging the Peace and Justice Divide, Oxford: Hart Publishing. (Scholar)
- Mamdani, Mahmood, 2000, “The Truth According to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission,” in The Politics of Memory: Truth, Healing and Social Justice, Ifi Amadiume & Abdullahi An-Na’im (eds.), New York: Zed Books, pp. 176-183. (Scholar)
- Matolino, Bernard, and Wenceslaus Kwindingwi, 2013, “The end of ubuntu,” South African Journal of Philosophy, 32(2): 197–205. (Scholar)
- May, Simon Cabulea, 2011, “Moral Compromise, Civic Friendship, and Political Reconciliation,” CRISPP: Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, 14(5): 581–602. (Scholar)
- McEvoy, Kieran, 2007, “Beyond Legalism: Towards a Thicker Understanding of Transitional Justice,” Journal of Law and Society, 34(4): 411–440. (Scholar)
- McGary, Howard, 2010, “Reconciliation and Reparations,” Metaphilosophy, 41(4): 546–562. (Scholar)
- Mendez, Juan E., 1997, “Accountability for Past Abuses,” Human Rights Quarterly, 19(2): 272–275. (Scholar)
- Meierhenrich, Jens, 2006, “The Ethics of Lustration,” Ethics and International Affairs, 20(1): 99–120. (Scholar)
- –––, 2008, “Varieties of Reconciliation,” Law & Social Inquiry, 33(1): 195–231. (Scholar)
- Mihai, Mihaela, 2016, Negative Emotions and Transitional Justice, New York: Columbia University Press. (Scholar)
- Minow, Martha, 1998, Between Vengeance and Forgiveness: Facing History after Genocide and Mass Violence, Boston: Beacon Press. (Scholar)
- Moellendorf, Darrel, 2007, “Reconciliation as a Political Value,” Journal of Social Philosophy, 38(2): 205–21. (Scholar)
- Moon, Claire, 2009, Narrating Political Reconciliation, Lanham, MD: Lexington Books. (Scholar)
- Morris, Herbert, 1968, “Persons and Punishment,” Monist, 52: 475–501. (Scholar)
- Murphy, Colleen, 2010, A Moral Theory of Political Reconciliation, New York: Cambridge University Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 2017, The Conceptual Foundations of Transitional Justice, New York: Cambridge University Press. (Scholar)
- Murphy, Jeffrie G., 2003, Getting Even: Forgiveness and Its Limits, New York: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Murphy, Michael, 2011, “Apology, Recognition, and Reconciliation,” Human Rights Review, 12(1): 47–69. (Scholar)
- Nino, Carlos, 1998, Radical Evil on Trial, New Haven: Yale University Press. (Scholar)
- O’Shea, Andreas, 2002, Amnesty for Crime in International Law and Practice, The Hague: Kluwer Law International. (Scholar)
- Pensky, Max, 2008, “Amnesty on Trial: Impunity, Accountability, and the Norms of International Law,” Ethics and Global Politics, 1(1–2): 1–40. (Scholar)
- Pettigrove, Glen, 2003, “Apology, Reparations, and the Question of Inherited Guilt,” Public Affairs Quarterly, 17(4): 319–348. (Scholar)
- –––, 2012, Forgiveness and Love, New York: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Philpott, Daniel, 2012, Just and Unjust Peace: An Ethic of Political Reconciliation, New York: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Radzik, Linda, 2009, Making Amends: Atonement in Morality, Law, and Politics, New York: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 2014, “Tort Processes and Relational Repair,” in Philosophical Foundations of the Law of Torts, John Oberdiek (ed.), New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 231–49. (Scholar)
- Regan, Paulette, 2010, Unsettling the Settler Within: Indian Residential Schools, Truth Telling, and Reconciliation in Canada, Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press. (Scholar)
- Rotberg, Robert I., and Dennis Thompson (eds.), 2000, Truth v, Justice: The Morality of Truth Commissions, Princeton: Princeton University Press. (Scholar)
- Scanlon, T. M., 2008, Moral Dimensions: Permissibility, Meaning, Blame, Cambridge, MA: Belknap/Harvard University Press. (Scholar)
- Schaap, Andrew, 2005, Political Reconciliation, New York: Routledge. (Scholar)
- –––, 2008, “Reconciliation as Ideology and Politics,” Constellations: An International Journal of Critical and Democratic Theory, 15(2): 249–264. (Scholar)
- Sharp, Dustin, 2015, “Emancipating Transitional Justice from the Bonds of the Paradigmatic Transition,” International Journal of Transitional Justice, 9(1): 150–169. (Scholar)
- Shklar, Judith, 1964, Legalism: An Essay on Law, Morals and Politics, Cambridge: Harvard University Press. (Scholar)
- Sher, George, 2013, “Wrongdoing and Relationships: The Problem of the Stranger,” in Blame: Its Nature and Norms, J. D. Coates and N. A. Tognazzini (eds.), New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 49–65. (Scholar)
- Smith, Nick, 2008, I Was Wrong: The Meanings of Apologies, New York: Cambridge University Press. (Scholar)
- South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Final Report, 1998. available online.
- South African National Unity and Reconciliation Act, No. 34, 1995, available online
- Steyn, Melissa, 2012, “The Ignorance Contract: Recollections of Apartheid Childhoods and the Construction of Epistemologies of Ignorance,” Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power, 19: 8–25. (Scholar)
- Tavuchis, Nicholas, 1991, Mea Culpa: A Sociology of Apology and Reconciliation, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. (Scholar)
- Teitel, Ruti, 2002, Transitional Justice, New York: Oxford University Press. (Scholar)
- Thompson, Janna, 2002, Taking Responsibility for the Past: Reparation and Historical Injustice, Cambridge: Polity Press. (Scholar)
- Torpey, John C., (ed.), 2003, Politics and the Past: On Repairing Historical Injustices, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. (Scholar)
- Tutu, Desmond, 1999, No Future without Forgiveness, New York: Image/Doubleday, (Scholar)
- van Ness, Daniel W., and Karen Heetderks Strong (eds.), 2002, Restoring Justice, 2nd edition, Cincinnati: Anderson Publishing. (Scholar)
- van Zyl, Paul, 2000, “Justice without Punishment: Guaranteeing Human Rights in Transitional Societies,” in Looking Back, Reaching Forward: Reflections on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa, Charles Villa-Vicencio and Wilhelm Verwoerd (eds.), Cape Town: University of Cape Town Press, pp. 42–57. (Scholar)
- Verdeja, Ernesto, 2009, Unchopping a Tree: Reconciliation in the Aftermath of Political Violence, Philadelphia: Temple. (Scholar)
- Waldron, Jeremy, 1992, “Superseding Historic Injustice,” Ethics, 103(1): 4–28. (Scholar)
- Walker, Margaret Urban, 2006, Moral Repair: Reconstructing Moral Relations after Wrongdoing, New York: Cambridge University Press. (Scholar)
- –––, 2010, “Truth Telling as Reparations,” Metaphilosophy, 41(4): 525–45. (Scholar)
- Wheeler, Samuel C. III, 1997, “Reparations Reconsidered,” American Philosophical Quarterly, 34(3): 301–18. (Scholar)
- Weschler, Lawrence, 1998, A Miracle, A Universe: Settling Accounts with Torturers, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. (Scholar)
- Wolterstorff, Nicholas, 2013, “Is It Possible and Sometimes Desirable for States to Forgive?” Journal of Religious Ethics, 41(3): 417–434. (Scholar)
- Woolford, Andrew, 2004, “The Limits of Justice: Certainty, Affirmative Repair, and Aboriginality,” Journal of Human Rights, 3(4): 429–44. (Scholar)
- Young, James E., 2008, “The Texture of Memory: Holocaust Memorials in History,” in A Companion to Cultural Memory Studies, A. Eril and A. Nünning (eds.), New York: Walter de Gruyter, pp. 357–65. (Scholar)
- Zalaquett, Jose, 1995, “Confronting Human Rights Violations Committed by Former Governments: Principles Applicable and Political Constraints,” Transitional Justice, Neil J, Kritz (ed.), Washington, DC: United States Institute of Peace Press, pp. 3–31. (Scholar)
- Zehr, Howard, 1990, Changing Lenses: A New Focus for Crime and Justice, Scottsdale, PA: Herald Press. (Scholar)
- Zembylas, Michalinos, 2011, “Mourning and Forgiveness as Sites of Reconciliation Pedagogies,” Journal of Bioethical Inquiry, 8(3): 257–265. (Scholar)